Upland Bird Hunting Ear Pro

Joined
Jan 11, 2016
Messages
907
Location
Broomfield, CO
Tried two different pairs of axil GS 2.0 and both failed. Luckily purchased from Scheels so got money back. Now on to the Alclair EXP Pro. So far so good on the Alclair.
Appreciate it if you can give a follow up after some use. Pretty interested in those. Have a friend that swears by his Soundgear Instant Fits. If anyone has experience with those good or bad I'd be interested in hearing.
 

huntineveryday

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 8, 2019
Messages
282
Appreciate it if you can give a follow up after some use. Pretty interested in those. Have a friend that swears by his Soundgear Instant Fits. If anyone has experience with those good or bad I'd be interested in hearing.

I have some of the Soundgear Instant Fits. Just about a full year into using them.

Pros: fit well and wear comfortably, have worn all day without problems, work great in the duck blind or dove hunting, have worn for upland and can still tell where the flush comes from, wind noise seems to be minimal, I am hearing things with them in that I wasn't before.

Cons: they seem to eat through batteries, so you always need extras on-hand, getting batteries changed in the field with cold hands isn't the easiest, they do change the sound some, but it doesn't take too long to adjust to.

I got mine pretty cheap at a Pheasants Forever banquet. At sale price, I'm happy with them. It didn't take too long to realize that the features found in the custom molded models would be great to have. The battery life has me really eyeing a pair of the Alclairs. They state a lot longer battery life and they would be custom molded.
 
Joined
Jan 11, 2016
Messages
907
Location
Broomfield, CO
I have some of the Soundgear Instant Fits. Just about a full year into using them.

Pros: fit well and wear comfortably, have worn all day without problems, work great in the duck blind or dove hunting, have worn for upland and can still tell where the flush comes from, wind noise seems to be minimal, I am hearing things with them in that I wasn't before.

Cons: they seem to eat through batteries, so you always need extras on-hand, getting batteries changed in the field with cold hands isn't the easiest, they do change the sound some, but it doesn't take too long to adjust to.

I got mine pretty cheap at a Pheasants Forever banquet. At sale price, I'm happy with them. It didn't take too long to realize that the features found in the custom molded models would be great to have. The battery life has me really eyeing a pair of the Alclairs. They state a lot longer battery life and they would be custom molded.
So roughly how long does a pair of batteries last?
 

Speaks

FNG
Classified Approved
Joined
Jul 27, 2024
Messages
88
Location
MN
I hated the sound gear instant fit, they did ok for gunfire but would amplify the hell out of leaves crunching, or god forbit a bag of chips. Wish I could try a good custom fit pair before dropping the $$ for some.
 

huntineveryday

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 8, 2019
Messages
282
So roughly how long does a pair of batteries last?

I haven't kept close enough track to tell you how many hours, but it seems like I go through a pair in a weekend of hunting. So maybe 2 full days of hunting? If the batteries run out it isn't terrible, then it's just a regular pair of earplugs, but it can be annoying when one is working and the other isn't. The batteries aren't terribly expensive, but I seem to go through a $15 package quick enough.

Soundgear says 6-8 days of hunting with the size 10 batteries on thier website. My experience doesn't match that. (And yes, I let the batteries set for a few minutes after pulling the tab before use, and I store them inside so they aren't too cold or too hot.)

The allclair exp pro claims 150 hours with the size 13 batteries.

They do amplify the sound pushing through grass and cover. But I can usually hear where the dog is better too, so it doesn't seem to bother me very much.
 
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