Pocket tour guide receivers for assistive listening. We have a broad selection of wireless receivers to allow audio systems to work for the benefit of hearing aid users – brought to you by Tourguide-SYSTEMS from Apple Sound Ltd.
All personal radio systems from Tourguide-SYSTEMS are designed for those who find it difficult listening from a distance and are specifically designed to help in ‘noisy’ environments, where background noise can make listening difficult due to poor inteligibility.
A personal assistive listening device is made up of a radio microphone, to place next to the source or talker(s), that provides you [the listener] with the sound quality experienced at close proximity but at much greater distances. Our receivers can be easily set up and adjusted by the user for comfortable volume; they are battery powered, lightweight and very compact, for inside or outside use; listen via earphones or by using a personal neck-loop, linked to your own hearing aid(s) using the Telecoil (“T-position”).
How is a personal FM system used as an assistive listening device?
With an assistive listening device from Tourguide-SYSTEMS, the transmitter is worn or held by the person talking (or connected into the television / audio source).
The receiver and neck loop is worn by the assistive listening device user, with their hearing aid switched to the ‘T ‘ pickup. Consistent sound will then be heard whatever direction the talker faces and even at a reasonable distance from the person speaking. The system may also be used for listening to the TV.
Assistive listening devices, in the form of radio aids, have been used by hearing aid wearers with significant benefit in education and business for many years.
For hearing aid users, the personal FM systems are used either with a neck loop or direct input connection as suitable. For non hearing help users, earphones can be used – please take note that whilst earphones may lift the volume for listeners with a mild hearing loss, they are not a substitute for a hearing aid dispensed by an audiologist.