Best ear plugs

bosco659

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I’ve decided I should start wearing ear plugs when I ride. Although I don’t spend a lot of time on the highway, I do notice after a ride, that my hearing has been temporarily affected. Most of my riding buddies are wearing hearing protection and I think it’s time. I have cheap disposable foam plugs but wondered what everyone is wearing. At the last bike show I attended they were selling silicone plugs. Just about bought a set then but thought I’d investigate further. The other thing that made me hesitate was the process. They essentially stick the end of a caulking gun in your ear and pump away. Made me wonder how they knew there was enough material in the ear? Do they keep squeezing until it comes out the other side? Lol.

Lots of options out there. Interested in what’s best.
 
I have hearing loss and tinnitus. I have been wearing foam ear plugs for about 20 years. This is what I have used for years now. I can wear a set of ear plugs 5 or 6 times before replacing them. I find them pretty cost effective.

https://www.walmart.com/ip/Flents-Q...air/510832508?athbdg=L1600&from=browseResults
IMG_5587.jpeg
 
Do they keep squeezing until it comes out the other side? Lol.
Yep. Gotta make sure it's filled.
Fwiw, I've been using the yellow foam industrial ear plugs on and off for a couple of decades. I only bother if I'm going out unfaired, not otherwise. I really wish I'd taken it more seriously forty and thirty years ago when the vast majority of my time on the road was spent at 70-80mph and unfaired.
 
I’ve decided I should start wearing ear plugs when I ride. Although I don’t spend a lot of time on the highway, I do notice after a ride, that my hearing has been temporarily affected. Most of my riding buddies are wearing hearing protection and I think it’s time. I have cheap disposable foam plugs but wondered what everyone is wearing. At the last bike show I attended they were selling silicone plugs. Just about bought a set then but thought I’d investigate further. The other thing that made me hesitate was the process. They essentially stick the end of a caulking gun in your ear and pump away. Made me wonder how they knew there was enough material in the ear? Do they keep squeezing until it comes out the other side? Lol.

Lots of options out there. Interested in what’s best.
I use silicone swimming ear plugs that you can buy at the drug store. Thy are marble sized and you roll them between your forefinger and thumb to make a cone, press inside your ear and hold. They work great and are not too expensive.
 
I tend to like the more squishy (highly technical word) disposable ones. I roll them up and they expand in my ear. On Sunday I didn't use ear plugs on the ride because I just bought a new Shoei full face helmet and it is WAY quieter than my old HJC, but I regretted not having ear plugs. I will go back to them. Fortnine did a video on this topic a while ago. It is worth watching.
 
Foam packs at the drug store. Cheap and works. Really helps eliminate wind noise. Last year my hearing had much in common with a rock. The volume bar at the bottom of the Tv screen was get'n longer and longer over time. Someone said since I wore olive drab for a time.... try the VA... Dand ! ... free hearing aids... the volume bar when to ... wife is happy size.... and ..what ? .. I get a disability check ... ( haven't told the wife about that part )....😎
 
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I’ve been working on and around jet engines since I was 19 years old. I worked on the ramp at ATL for over 20 years. I’m 64 and my hearing is near perfect. Largely due to the foam earplugs pictured above. Those are the best. They won’t fall out of your ears.

Any foam earplugs under your helmet will do the trick. Even small acorns would stop that helmet noise.
 
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I have been wearing the same pair of Auritech earplugs for about 2 - 3 years now. I find them to be easily washed, comfortable and effective while allowing a reasonable level of hearing:
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It is important to fit earplugs correctly. I use the following method and find this stops the plugs coming loose:
 
I have been wearing the same pair of Auritech earplugs for about 2 - 3 years now. I find them to be easily washed, comfortable and effective while allowing a reasonable level of hearing:
View attachment 241912

It is important to fit earplugs correctly. I use the following method and find this stops the plugs coming loose:
I also use these and find the fit and performance very good.
I have also used squishy foam one to good effect; and there cheap.
Something is better than nothing; hearing loss / degradation is preventable for not a lot of money or effort. Wind noise is your enemy.
 
Cheapo foam disposables. Buy 'em by the jug, can usually wear a pair a dozen times or so before they get disgusting.

Hearing aids out, plugs in, helmet on, ride.

Arrive, helmet off, plugs out, aids in.

Rinse. Repeat.

Pain in the tuches, but I can hear right away instead of half an hour later...
 
Cheapo foam disposables. Buy 'em by the jug, can usually wear a pair a dozen times or so before they get disgusting.

Hearing aids out, plugs in, helmet on, ride.

Arrive, helmet off, plugs out, aids in.

Rinse. Repeat.

Pain in the tuches, but I can hear right away instead of half an hour later...
That’s what I find. Without plugs, when you pop your helmet off, everything sounds “off”. Fortunately hearing goes back to “normal”. Thought plugs are a good idea.

Bit of a funny story. I was adjusting the horn on the XS and got it sounding just right. Went out for a ride and while cruising along, tried the horn. Wouldn’t you know, it wasn’t working anymore. Got home, popped my helmet off (and removed my earplugs that I forgot about) and the horn sounded perfect. Guess those earplugs worked!
 
Very smart to wear ear plugs. Back in the late 70's I was engaged in neuropsychological research in grad school and I consulted with the Gebbie Hearing Clinic here in Syracuse regarding some noise that I was proposing to present to human subjects. I showed up for the consultation meeting with my motorcycle helmet in hand, as I had ridden it to the building. We ended up discussing the dangers of engine and wind noise first, and since that day I have worn E.A.R. "Classic" yellow foam plugs as mentioned above. They are "industrial quality" and were developed by acoustic researchers at 3M.

I push then all the way in when I use my very loud Ferris Zero turn machine

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On the bike I push them in less than that and even sometimes shave them down a bit so that I can hear the exhaust note somewhat.

Here are a few facts:

Motorcycles hazardous to your hearing​

Think of your ears next time you go cruising on your motorbike. The roar of the engine and the wind noise rival the noise of a rock concert or a chainsaw, and your helmet offers no protection for your ears.
Motorcycles hazardous to your hearing

Motorcycles look great but they are not for sensitive ears. A group of scientists from the University of Florida revved up 33 different motorcycles and recorded the noise levels. Nearly half of them produced sound levels above 100 dB.

"Almost all of the motorcycles we tested reached action-level noise, which in the workplace would require ear protection," stated Joy Colle, an audiologist and researcher.

The US government's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) warns that exposure to noise in excess of 100 dB is safe for only 15 minutes.

Wind noise​

Wind noise is another potential threat to the hearing of the riders. One hour at freeway speeds with unprotected hearing can cause permanent hearing loss.

An OSHA study found that a motorcycle ride at 60 kilometres per hour (37 miles per hour) with an open helmet and no hearing protection results in ambient noise levels of 75 to 90 dB, comparable to operating a leaf blower or lawn mower.

At 100 kilometres per hour (63 miles per hour) sound levels range between 103 dB and 116 dB. At those highway speeds a drive without hearing protection should be limited to less than 15 minutes.

Your helmet offers protection against bumps and even crashes but it does not keep out much of the noise. Studies have indicated that the maximum noise reduction from wearing a helmet ranges from 3 to 5 dB. An inexpensive set of earplugs reduces noise exposure by as much as 35 dB, allowing you to ride all day without the fear of hearing damage.

Sources: United Press International, Toronto Star.
Published on hear-it on June 15, 2009



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Good info Jeff!

Your helmet offers protection against bumps and even crashes but it does not keep out much of the noise.

There is a great disparity in wind noise from different helmets. The flip front modular helmets that I favor are much noisier than a solid full face helmet is. It seems there is a lot of wind turbulence around the hinge joints.
 
Good info Jeff!



There is a great disparity in wind noise from different helmets. The flip front modular helmets that I favor are much noisier than a solid full face helmet is. It seems there is a lot of wind turbulence around the hinge joints.
Wha...wha...what did you say?
 
Excellent info @YamadudeXS650C. I just started wearing ear muffs a couple of years ago when cutting the lawn. Usually wore the muffs with the chainsaw but with the weed whacker maybe not so much (my bad), but will do so going forward. Also transitioned to a cordless trimmer a few years ago for “regular” use. When the weeds are high the gas machine comes out.
 
I have a pair of muffs, forget the brand but from some major chainsaw company, I use them when mowing, weed eating or running chain saws. I took the speakers off a cheap set of headphones from an old cassette player, yes still had one of those around! I trimmed them down to where they would pop into the muffs. Now I have a small MP3 plyer not much bigger that a pack of matches that I have music downloaded to that I listen while I work. And don't have to turn volume up much over half!

Just wish I could find a way to do something similar for the bike with the addition of using an intercom to talk to wife on her bike. Using the helmets we have now with built-in intercoms I am only able to understand 75% of what is said at say 40 mph. Gets much worse at higher speeds. This is without any ear plugs, with ear plugs it is actually worse. Plugs help with the wind noise but also blocks the speech so it kind of a toss-up.
 
Yes, comfort is a significant variable. The Classic E.A.R. plugs are designed to expand into your ear canal in such a way that they cause no discomfort.

They are also easy to install. Just roll them between your fingers to reduce the diameter and jam them in. Quick and easy. I buy them 100 at a time.

BTW, although I've been wearing ear plugs on the bike and at rock concerts from the 70's, I did not avoid getting two hearing disorders, moderate hyperacusis and mild tinnitus. Not sure how this happened. I do like to crank up the home stereo.






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