When I rode all the time I had a set of moulded ones made with built in monitors. Expensive but they lasted me years. I only stopped wearing them because I stopped riding the bike every day and misplaced them in the garage somewhere.
I got an intercom system so can listen to music and auto answer phone calls but best thing is an extension to the screen stops 90% of noise up to 70 mphWhat does everyone use? I have a hard time with the expandable foam (cheapy) type. They don't stay in well or begin to hurt after a while. I want to cut down on the wind noise (have a full-face helmet) but still hear what's going on. Need all day comfort and not too fussy to put in. Suggestions?
I've heard that an audiologist can custom fit plugs for not too much. Anyone tried that?
I have a hard time with the expandable foam (cheapy) type. They don't stay in well or begin to hurt after a while.
there are considerable differences in the characteristics of ear wax from one person to another - some people have 'dry' ear wax, others have 'wet' ear wax
Walmart pharmacy. I've often had earplugs in 18 hours a day after riding and then have a noisy campground. Walmart pharmacy area has 2 different soft plugs that are both soft and work well. One is straight sides and one is formed. Never had ear pain with these.
I like the 3M Neons. I purchased a huge box of them and just on my last 10.Like @paulcb , I prefer the disposable foam ones. My favourite is 3M EAR Yellow Neons - they are soft, conform to my ear canal well, and have excellent sound attenuation. The Yellow Neons are softer than the 'standard' 3M foam earplugs, and also have a rounded end.
I am aware that custom-fitted ones might be more comfortable, but the problem is losing them. The disposable ones cost very little if purchased in a large box of 100 or 1,000, and I can get about 3 days of use out of a pair before they become dirty (not from my ear, but from the time they spend in my pocket when I am not wearing them).
My younger sister spent some years working as an audiologist, and she advises me that there are considerable differences in the characteristics of ear wax from one person to another - some people have 'dry' ear wax, others have 'wet' ear wax. This might explain why a particular type of foam ear plug that one person raves about being really comfortable might not be comfortable for the next person. I think you need to experiment a bit with different types and different brands, and once you find ones you like, buy a huge box of them and stuff 'em in the unlocked fairing pocket of the motorcycle.
Michael
3M EAR Yellow Neons
![]()
Walmart has worked fine for me. The purple straight sided ones. They seem identical to the blue HEAROS. All day quiet. all day comfy.
By Far the most comfortable foam ear plugs I've tried - & I've tried A LOT, they are super-soft, made for smaller ear canals - EZ-Fit by 3M. I can leave them in all day with no-ear ache. I used to use the Laser-lites, which are good, but still were too big. I found EZ-Fit's here:What does everyone use? I have a hard time with the expandable foam (cheapy) type. They don't stay in well or begin to hurt after a while. I want to cut down on the wind noise (have a full-face helmet) but still hear what's going on. Need all day comfort and not too fussy to put in. Suggestions?
I've heard that an audiologist can custom fit plugs for not too much. Anyone tried that?