Koncha labs are Since 2017, over-the-counter hearing AIDS is making, only a product marketing-Kankcha Sol.
Hearing AIDS has an familiar design, each behind a classic back-eunal configuration with a simple winding control behind each. Concha especially avoids its adaptation capacity: SOL comes in your choice of four colors, and can be configured with lead wires in four different sizes, although it should be noted that many competitive hearing devices have the lead wires that can be adjusted and replace with large or small people.
At the time of your order, Concha hearing devices work to convert your ears, skin tones, and your hair color (if you are lucky), then maximize the possibility that they will mix and fit properly. I received a gray model with the longest available lead and measured the weight of these devices at 2.03 grams, which is very light for the year hearing AIDS.
Battery changed
The primary reason behind such light weight is the largest negative aspect of SOL: changed battery. It is a nonstarter in the world of today’s hearing aid, and it is surprising that Concha Labs still cling to an extinct power model, which requires the user need to thunder with a new pair of small battery every 5 to 7 days. While the chanted battery offers far more lifetime than the best rechargeable cells (as well as light weight above), they are still a problem that enjoys something. (Since the final research I have seen, from 2021, he showed that 70 percent hearing aid users prefer rechargeable hearing systems,
Assuming that you are fine with a changed battery system, Concha Sol has a lot for them. It starts with tuning. Concha does not use the preset sound profile like most OTC AIDS. The preset profiles are protitude frequency waves based on thousands of historical hearing tests, which people have taken over the years. These audiogram are average, and a handful of representatives are loaded on audiogram hardware. When you take an in-app hearing test, APP reveals which of these audiogram is closest to you and loads the appropriate improvements in the hearing aid hardware. This is not correct, but it is quite good for most users.
Concha has conducted an underlying hearing test in its app, but it is completely contrary to the specific hearing test, where you hear for pinges on various frequencies and versions until a complete picture of your hearing loss develops. After some initial level-settings, the system of the concha, called a soundscope, asks you (with each ear), repeatedly listening to the snipites of the speech (with each ear), then identify whether sample A or sample B looks best. It is like an eye test, only for your ears.