Varibel info
As a professional, you want to be up to date and have current knowledge at your disposal. You also want to be in a position to tell your clients everything about the Varibel hearing aid glasses, the glasses which can hear.
Optimal directional sensitivity
The Varibel hearing aid glasses make conversations in noisy surroundings possible as a result of the product’s great directional sensitivity. Four minuscule microphones in the earpiece look after the digital signal processing. The length of the earpiece is a defining factor: the longer the row of microphones, the stronger the directional sensitivity. The glasses therefore represent major added value. The Varibel hearing aid glasses have a maximum 8,3 dB gain directivity in the viewing direction, whilst a directional behind-the-ear hearing aid with two microphones offers a maximum 1,25 dB gain directivity in the viewing direction.
Ease of use
There is a great deal more to the Varibel hearing aid glasses than simply putting them on and off and turning them on and off. The hearing aid glasses have seven programme positions, each for a different situation. These are inside; outside; Omni; talking in noisy surroundings; loop system (T); loop system (MT); telephone or deactivated. A button on the front of the earpiece allows the wearer to easily switch between the three pre-programmed positions. Special bleeps which have been adjusted in line with the hearing loss will indicate these programme changes.
Wearing comfort
Varibel offers maximum wearing comfort to the wearer with loss of hearing: only the earpiece is positioned behind the ear. The Varibel hearing solutions means the earpiece and hearing aid are not in each other’s way.
User friendly fitting software
Adjusting the Varibel hearing solution can be compared to a modern digital hearing aid. Varibel’s user friendly fitting software can be started up with NOAH software. You can subsequently adjust the following per ear: autofit with the NAL-NL1 rule; volume; gain in 32 channels; compression ratios and release times; maximum output and finally user programmes.