Does anyone have a pair? How do they compare to generic ear plugs?

  • grooving@lemmy.studio
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    3 months ago

    Bro. Hell to the yes. Generic are itchy and irritating. Custom silicone fits perfect. You can get them with different interchangable filters. Mine are for people working at music venues so it dips all sound by 17db but the voice frequency is dipped by 11db. So I can continue to hear people fine but all the loud noises and especially bass and room ambience is gone. I wear them to bed and nearly all the time when I just go outside because I live next to a busy road. Best thing I’ve bought in the last 5 years.

    The filters get expensive if you want to get a bunch of different ones, like there is one out there for gun fire. So guns get lowered but you can still hear talking. Filters for road rumble and wind noise for motorcyclists. People that work at like F1 have specific filters too. It’s kinda wild to me now that people are just raw dogging reality with their ears. Ambulance passing, it doesn’t hurt. Someone hurling insults at you on the street. Sounds like they’re whispering under their breath. Is it expensive, yes(less so during black Friday). Would I pay full price for them again. Also yes.

    Any questions let me know. Edit:spelling

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I thought it was about the fit, or maybe they are molded for your ears too?

      I have like slits and not “tubes” so all plugs just fall out.

      • grooving@lemmy.studio
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        3 months ago

        They are moulded to my ears. If you got unusual ears i donno what to say, but I suspect they could custom mould for you too. Go ask an audiologist.

  • pr06lefs@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    I like mine. I have tinnitus and its important to me to be able to dial down loud music and movies, without the sound getting muffled and unintelligible. Mine are custom molded with removable 20db etymotics filters; they came with solid filters too that you can switch when you just want to block sound and don’t care about fidelity.

    Before these I had some etymotics 30$ musician’s earplugs and they never worked very well. With them in I couldn’t make out the words a singer was singing, and always felt like I was missing out on the music.

    My GF has a pair of 20$ musicians plugs she likes just fine (“downbeats”), and she doesn’t feel like they ruin the sound. So maybe custom molded isn’t as important as a good filter?

    For sleeping, shooting, or settings where hearing isn’t important, the foam ones are fine.

  • itsworkthatwedo@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    1000% yes. I’m on my 3rd pair. I use them almost daily. Being in a band, going to shows, riding motorcycle, work stuff, loud bars, home improvement projects, at this point I could not live without them. As someone else mentioned, filters are expensive, but get a pair of 15+ dB filters and you’ll be good 99% of the time. You only get one pair of ears, so treat yourself.

  • SippyCup@feddit.nl
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    3 months ago

    Regular foam 3m earplugs, or the lighter river ones on a string are as good or better than the custom molded ones, when properly inserted. They’ll down out loud sounds and you’ll still be able to have a perfectly normal conversation with someone standing next to you.

    Most people aren’t wearing them correctly. Custom plugs tend to have this long tail that goes in to your ear canal, foam plugs should go as deep.

    For a couple of bucks for a hundred of these things it’s hard to imagine that the expense for a custom pair is even remotely worth it.

  • AlternatePersonMan@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Dunno. But I have purchased the kind for music, back when I was in a band. Much better than the foam kind. They also attenuate sound evenly rather than the drill thinking of adults in a Charlie Brown Christmas special. Great for concerts.

  • Yes. I got them for playing the drums but now I keep them in my work bag for whenever I find myself working behind a server rack. They are much better than generic ones because everything is just quieter rather than only some frequencies, which means talking with others is easier.

  • richardwagner@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I’ve also heard about earbuds specifically designed to tune out noise. Wonder how those work?

    • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I’ve got earbuds tips made out of earplugs material. They’re great! However I tend to run hotter when wearing them, they really bottle up the body heat. Almost like wearing earmuffs!

    • grooving@lemmy.studio
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      3 months ago

      I use Pacific ears in Australia. But ultimately it’s going to be the exact same product. Just moulded silicone. So what ever is cheapest. But if you want filters they might be more brand specific, but I don’t really know. In Australia there aren’t many options as far as I could find.