Hearing loss and equalizers

  There is now a set of USB powered speakers for watching movies on my laptop.


  Until my power station is up to par, I occasionally watch movies, television on my laptop's 1080p screen. The audio has, unfortunately, not been adequate.

  The VLC player has a feature that allows cranking the volume up to 200%. That helps.

  I recently replaced my decaying Sennheiser headphones with a new-old Sennheiser RS 65 wireless headphone set. The plastic in the wire of the old set had dried out, become brittle, and was cracking every couple of inches.

  The new phones are nice but suffer from inadequate audio. Useable but could be better.

  Previously, I had connected an Alesis me-230 stereo equalizer to the audio network in my entertainment system. This allowed me to watch movies on the big screen with audio that had been adjusted to compensate for my hearing loss.

  The headphones came with a transmitter-charger. The transmitter has a phono cable to plug into the laptop's external audio jack. This I replaced with the equalizer + cables assembly.
The laptop audio goes into the equalizer and the equalizer output goes to the headphone transmitter's input.


  This afternoon, I dug up and used, the proper cables to adapt the equalizer to my laptop and the wireless headphones. Now I can enjoy laptop movies with compensated audio.

UPDATE: I've gotten hearing aids, courtesy of my insurance company, UHC. I've stored the equalizer away. The setup works but is messy. I had to alter connections whenever I wanted to go from listening through computer speakers or wireless headphones. The. LG Smart TV has some equalizer capabilities, but I'm gpoing to rely on hearing aids

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