Hunting Ear Pro Recommendations

Joined
Oct 2, 2018
Messages
43
Location
Oklahoma
Looking for ear pro recommendations for waterfowl and deer firearms seasons.
I’ve used Walker Razors during duck season, but I’m interested in something smaller.
Also looking for something nicer than typical PPE safety earplugs.


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I haven't tried these yet, but I plan to one day.

I want to at least try the filtered plugs sooner than later, but the custom molded electronic ones look awesome, just so expensive...

There is a Meateater podcast where they talk to the woman who owns it. I submitted a question on the website and got a call from her and had all my questions answered. You don't find that kind of customer service very often.

https://otoprotechnologies.com/
 
If you have health insurance might be worth taking with an audiologist in your area. Surprisingly enough I went in and they were able to get custom molded hearing protection 100% paid for through health insurance. Ended up with two pairs of these and a bunch non electronic plugs. The phantoms are fantastic for waterfowl and hunting. Not sufficient for the range when busy and lots of unsupressed shooting.

https://soundgear.com/products/soundgear-phantom


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Never thought about that. Can probably use HSA funds then too?
I bet you could.

I am not sure how they billed the insurance but they knew how to do it. Told my buddy and he was able to do the same thing with a different insurance company.
 
If you have health insurance might be worth taking with an audiologist in your area. Surprisingly enough I went in and they were able to get custom molded hearing protection 100% paid for through health insurance. Ended up with two pairs of these and a bunch non electronic plugs. The phantoms are fantastic for waterfowl and hunting. Not sufficient for the range when busy and lots of unsupressed shooting.

https://soundgear.com/products/soundgear-phantom


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I tried the Phantoms and they worked great. A downside, for me, was that they do not pick up the sound of a gobbler drumming.
 
I had walkers replaceable battery ear buds, they were not good, as they used hearing aid batteries, which are oxygen activated and battery depletes whether your use them or not. So every 3rd Saturday, i was fumbling around replacing small batteries in the marsh.

One guy in the group has Axil rechargeable, and does lots of big name hunts with lots of shooting and loves them.

I just upgraded to walkers rope rechargeable for this season. So far so good. $65 on amazon. Opted for standard version without Bluetooth.
 
Ive had Caldwells, Walkers muffs & corded electronic plugs and now Im running Axils.

My favorite so far had been the Caldwells. However for some reason, they now blink either red or yellor or green. One will blink and the other wont. Then ill get the othet
R to stop blinking and the other will start. Frustrating. Looked in the manual and also YouTube videos. Can't figure the stupid thing out.

MidwayUSA had walkers with the cord behind your neck. Bought them in Jan last season and crapped out on me over the summer in July. Barely 6 mo.

I also would NOT recommend ones with a cord. Laying in my layout, you look left or right and the cord pulls the plug out. If in an A Frame or on the range, totally fine. But not in a layout with your head against the head pad.

I used the Axils for the first time Saturday & Sunday. Theyre OK.

I got the blue tooth ones just because they were only $20 more from Rogers a couple weeks back.

The Caldwells were more...."pure" in sound. I could hear better directionally. The Axils are more....shall I say..."quiet" or "muffled" maybe. Hard to explain knowing the difference between Caldwells and Axil's, even with the volume high.

I guess maybe a better way to say it is the Caldwells helped me ENHANCE my hearing. Where as the Axils dont. I hear better without the Axils than I do with the Axils in. So Id say I hear maybe 80% of what I hear without the Axils in my ears.

So not as pure.

And Im too cheap to order anything more expensive. As much as Id like the $400-2000 ones. Ill probably stick with the $150 ones and replace them every other year for the next 20 yrs. Maybe by then the technology of the $2000 ones will be down in my price point....? 🤷🤷
 
I've just reused my regular bluetooth ear buds for the occasional hunt, they work for the 1 or 2 shots I've needed them for. If I'm going to be doing a bunch of shooting I use the tried and true HL Impact Sport muffs
 
Looking for ear pro recommendations for waterfowl and deer firearms seasons.
I’ve used Walker Razors during duck season, but I’m interested in something smaller.
Also looking for something nicer than typical PPE safety earplugs.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I have a pair of Soundgear's custom molded ear plugs. I like them. Wear them duck hunting, shooting etc. I even got a high freq pair for work, but having a hard time implementing them even though I know I should. Comfort is great.
 
I used Westone defend ear digital. Expensive, but work and the best part, the electronics can be moved to a new ear pc if needed. Wife just updated her plugs due to a large weight loss. Was only 150 for new plugs.
 
Just make sure you use something. I shot two does last year with my .44 mag revolver within an hour of each other. I now have permanent hearing loss and my tinnitus is 10x worse. So stupid.
 
Been using ESP Classic analogs, for many years....standard 13 hearing aid batteries that last for 3-4 days, comfortable, but a bit pricey.
 
I haven't tried these yet, but I plan to one day.

I want to at least try the filtered plugs sooner than later, but the custom molded electronic ones look awesome, just so expensive...

There is a Meateater podcast where they talk to the woman who owns it. I submitted a question on the website and got a call from her and had all my questions answered. You don't find that kind of customer service very often.

https://otoprotechnologies.com/
Same. She actually called me back while she was at home getting dinner ready for her family. I just need to pull the trigger on some.
 
I've always used foam plugs and used over the ear muffs for my 300 UM.....

What is the dB level that's needed for deer rifles and shotguns? 25 dB ??
 
Custom molded are the best, followed by by muffs.

People here would flip out if they knew what I use.

Besides, I thought the real issue was "concussion".
 
I've always used foam plugs and used over the ear muffs for my 300 UM.....

What is the dB level that's needed for deer rifles and shotguns? 25 dB ??

An unsuppressed .308 from a 20” barrel measures roughly 160 db at the shooter’s ear (not the same as the dbA measurement usually listed by suppressor manufacturers. The .308 from a 20” barrel measures about 156 SE dbA). To be “hearing safe” for a single exposure, you want to get that below 140 db. A single exposure above 140 db can cause permanent hearing damage (that’s the OSHA threshold). That’s not to say that “all you need to do is get below 140 db” to be safe. You want all the protection you can get, especially for repeated exposures.

As the frequency of the exposure goes up (more shots per minute), the need to protect your hearing goes up. So, for example, repeated exposure to 120 db can still hurt your hearing.

A pair of *properly inserted* and *properly fitting* ear plugs provides approximately 30 db of protection.

A set of *properly worn* and *properly fitting* headphones provides approximately 30 db of protection.

Combining a pair of *properly inserted* and *properly fitting* ear plugs with a set of *properly worn* and *properly fitting* headphones provides approximately 45-55 db of protection. Some sound can still be conducted into your ear drums via your jaw bones and there are diminishing returns as you stack that kind of hearing protection. That’s why it’s not 60.

And the emphasis on properly worn is important, because many people don’t wear them properly.

A good suppressor on a 20” .308 takes the measurement from 160 db down to about 132-133 SE db (The same suppressor measures about 128 SE dbA).

For an extended range session, it is important to use as much hearing protection as possible. At the range, I use plugs, headphones, and a suppressor. For hunting in open terrain, or wherever time permits, I use plugs and a suppressor whenever possible. For hunting in close terrain, I just use the suppressor.
 
I've always used foam plugs and used over the ear muffs for my 300 UM.....

What is the dB level that's needed for deer rifles and shotguns? 25 dB ??
shotguns need less protection as they are quieter, 150-155 db. Rifles run 160-170 range. Foam plugs run 15-30 depending on the fit and user skill. Custom plugs run 25-27, yes foam tests better than customs. I worked for a lab and we tested our stuff. Muffs run 15-25 with glasses. The slit leak from the glasses reduce the effectiveness of muffs. Also muffs can be lifted off the head in larger blasts. Double protection is 45-50, limited by bone conduction.

With all that said, single protectors, plugs or muffs may get you below 140 which is what is needed for a single shot. For 100 shots you need to be under 130. That takes double protection for a rifle, a single protector will do it for a shotgun, but only if worn correctly.
For 1000 shots, maybe a rso or score keeper, you need to be under 120. Even double protection is marginal for a rifle. Shotgun, no problem.
 
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