

👂 Hear the difference, feel the connection!
Earglasses® Personal Sound Reflectors are innovative, battery-free lenses designed to enhance sound clarity naturally. Weighing less than half an ounce, they provide a comfortable and affordable solution for those who struggle with hearing, making them perfect for shared spaces.
| ASIN | B00B3LRKVM |
| Customer Reviews | 3.4 3.4 out of 5 stars (551) |
| Date First Available | January 28, 2013 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | No Model |
| Manufacturer | Big Ideas Incorporated |
| Product Dimensions | 2.25 x 2 x 3 inches; 0.4 ounces |
F**.
A SIMPLE BUT GREAT PRODUCT
I purchased this product to help me better hear around the house, especially when watching TV or listening to radio. And as simple as they are, they simply work GREAT. First, when I purchased them, they were missing the tape strips to hold them on. I called Amazon and they gave me a refund and said to buy them again. I did. I then called EARGLASSES and spoke to Michael, the head of the company, and he immediately sent me the tape strips and additionally, he sent me elastiics to hold the earglasses on my ears. He was both very friendly and very helpful. As for the EARGLASSES Sound Magnifiers just cup your hands behind your esrs while you are watching TV, and if you are like most of us with some hearing loss, you will notice a tremendous increase in hearing. Well, the EARGLASSES simply replaces your hands, and actually, they do a much better job than your hands. You will be amazed at how much better you can hear the TV or radio or music, and what's best, they are very inexpensive and there are no batteries to buy or replace. They just sit in place behind your ears and dramatically improve your hearing. They are a simple design that simpliy helps you hear better. I highly recommend you try them. I bought them and I absolutely love them!
A**R
They don't work and here's the simple physics
These gimmicky things do not work. The reason is simple: the aperture (ie the area into which the sound is collected) is no bigger than your ear. I'm not referring to your little ear hole, but rather the physical size of your flappy ear that acts as kind of focusing reflector to collect sound. If you cup your hands around your ears you can significantly increase the volume of sound because you are adding the area of your hand to the area of the ear and thus increasing the aperture. But if you look at the semicircular opening when these things are worn, you can see it's no bigger than (and actually a little smaller than) your ear! There is NO significant increase in the sound volume. The concept of ear glasses is a good one -- since cupped hands do work, why not have larger reflector perhaps worn like earphones, adjustable, stable, and comfortable, that could triple the ear aperture, like cupped hands? Think of bat-ears, or rabbit ears. But these are incorrectly designed and simply don't work. Whoever put this on the market gave no thought and did no testing of what they were pushing. Moreover, there is no way they are comfortable and the little plastic loop does nothing to hold them in place. These are wrong, wrong wrong.
M**N
They DO Work. Best for smaller ears. Not Ideal, but the only game in town...
These DO work. They are NOT perfect, but they are the only game in town. I am surprised, but nobody else seems to make a thingy like these. Mostly because of tinnitus and some hearing loss in the high range, music sounds duller to me and some speech is hard to understand. Of course you probably won't wear these in the real world, but at home for music or TV, these seem very useful. THEY COULD BE BETTER: I think the plastic material has some minor resonance at just the frequencies it is best at boosting. So a better, deader material would be nice. I think the shape could be better thought out. I don't think the severe cupping is as good as something like your own hand. It does not work as well as my hands cupping, but then it's hard to hold them up for more than 10 minutes! Some reviewers said they were held on with Tape. Not the ones I got (7/7/2017). These came with a sort of rubber band. It works fine for me. I wouldn't go jogging with them, but they aren't slipping off. EAR SIZE: The smaller your ears, the more benefit you will get and probably the more comfortable these things will be for you. I have small ears and they seem fine. Bigger ears will have to curve around the tight cupping (again, not a great design for acoustics or comfort). Also, bigger ears are already bigger - so these won't boost you as much. Overall, I would buy these again, which is about as good a complement as they need.
C**K
Earglasses® Personal Sound Magnifiers, Set of Two Hearing Amplifiers
First off they should not be advertised as "amplifiers" as they do not amplify anything. They do work as a sound directional focus apparatus. They do focus sound to your ear as much or a little more than placing cupped hands behind you ear and turning your head in the direction of the sound. So if that's what you want to do these will work fine in helping to keep your arms from tiring, but it is a little costly for just that.
J**.
Goofy looking, but they're cheap and work.
I bought these hoping to be able to hear the beeping of my dog's wireless collar, so I could train her to stop when she hit the limit of her allowable roam, however the beep was so faint i couldn't hear it unless the collar was held to my ear. Even with these mechanical hearing aids, I wasn't able to successfully hear the beep alerts. That being said, these inexpensive devices do collect sound quite well and make a marked difference in the ease of listening to tv, radio, etc without jacking up the volume. They are rather geeky and I wouldn't wear them in public in most cases, however the pluses are that they are inexpensive, require no batteries, will not wear out, do not need adjustment and perform well for the money. The reviews for most electronic hearing aids are not too impressive anyway, so why not give these a shot and see if they'll fill your need?
Trustpilot
2 months ago
2 months ago