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rj headsets again

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Hootie9750

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 11, 2002
Posts
293
Does anyone have any experience as to which is quieter in the cockpit, the bose qc2 combo or the sennheiser hmec25? I currently have an old huge knockoff headset that wont fit in my flight bag with the 85lbs of jepps. I just got the bose qc2 in the mail but after putting them on they dont seem to block out as much noise as I would like.
I dont care if I can listen to my ipod, I just like it quiet but it also has to fit somehow in the flight case. Thanks!!
 
BOSE X works just fine for me ....
 
i am getting the panther CAT system. supposed to be great, very quiet and very light. will let you know.
 
anybody have any experience with the sennheiser hmec25?

I have them and they work great. They are small and fit on top of my jepps in its case. You can get a discount and no interest payments from the ALPA website.
 
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I just got the QC2 and Uflymike set and I will not trade them for anything. Sitting in a relatively quiet room and turning them on does not do them justice. you have to try them on a plane. The bose seems to take both the painful highs and lows out of sound. The bose X are good but ugly and expensive. The Heisenbergerstiens or whatever are good and more rugged than the QC2s but heavier, bulky and give about the same performance. I didn't even mention batteries. The QC2 uses one AAA and it's in one earphone not inline on the cord.
 
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try the lightspeed mach 1 before you commit to either of the two your looking at now....light comfortable....easy to carry anywhere...500 bucks...well worth the investment
 
try the lightspeed mach 1 before you commit to either of the two your looking at now....light comfortable....easy to carry anywhere...500 bucks...well worth the investment

I just dont like sh1t in my ear if it doesnt have to be there.


I guess I'll just have to give the qc2's a try in the a/c, hopefully they can quiet the cockpit better than they can quiet my television.
 
The bose X are good but ugly

That is about the worst justification I have ever heard. Do you plan on wearing your headset to bar on overnights?

Simple fact: the Bose X is the best aviation headset ever made...period.
 
Simple fact: the Bose X is the best aviation headset ever made...period.

I disagree; the thing has no passive attenuation at all. None. A jet aircraft has a lot of high-frequency wind noise that ANR does nothing to attenuate.

I'm not saying the Sennheiser is perfect, but when the battery dies you at least still have some hearing protection.
 
I just got the QC2 and Uflymike set and I will not trade them for anything. Sitting in a relatively quiet room and turning them on does not do them justice. you have to try them on a plane. The bose seems to take both the painful highs and lows out of sound. The bose X are good but ugly and expensive. The Heisenbergerstiens or whatever are good and more rugged than the QC2s but heavier, bulky and give about the same performance. I didn't even mention batteries. The QC2 uses one AAA and it's in one earphone not inline on the cord.
Not a "headset" as required by:
FAR, 21.305, 25.1457, TSO-C57a Headsets and Speakers, 121.359(g)
Do your own research. Even check the uFlymike website, not TSO'd
PBR
 
I just dont like sh1t in my ear if it doesnt have to be there.


I guess I'll just have to give the qc2's a try in the a/c, hopefully they can quiet the cockpit better than they can quiet my television.

if your in the CRJ you have no idea how quiet you have it compared to the jungle jet....
 
Tso 57 & 58

PBRstreetgang,

There is no FAA requirement for a headset to be TSOd under TSO 57 & 58 unless they're part of the aircraft equipment, i.e., listed on the MEL/CDL.

Your post is incorrect.

Mike
UFlyMike LLC
 
I disagree; the thing has no passive attenuation at all. None. A jet aircraft has a lot of high-frequency wind noise that ANR does nothing to attenuate.

I'm not saying the Sennheiser is perfect, but when the battery dies you at least still have some hearing protection.

I've tried the Sennheiser on a few legs and couldn't stand it. Not enough room in the ear cups for a life sized ear, ear cups are not shaped like a human ear, and they are not very quiet.

The Bose does have reasonable passive attenuation however it doesn't seem that way when the active noise cancelling kicks off. Anything will seem loud when you go from 30db of total noise reduction to 10 db. Likewise when your sennheiser drops off ANR and you go from a reduction of 20 db to 10 db it will "seem" like the sennheiser has better passive reduction when in fact it doesn't.
 
PBRstreetgang,

There is no FAA requirement for a headset to be TSOd under TSO 57 & 58 unless they're part of the aircraft equipment, i.e., listed on the MEL/CDL.

Your post is incorrect.

Mike
UFlyMike LLC
Wellll Mike,
The FARs require a headset below 18000ft. The FARs listed show a requirement for headset useage. "headset" is defined by the TSO process. There is nothing "incorrect" about my post. Select reading of the FARs might give you a warm and fuzzy feeling, but still leaves you just as wrong as intentional disregard.
As an airman we do not "interpret" the FARs, we comply, no more no less. My dog in this "fight" is correct FAR compliance, yours is......
PBR
 
The Telex 850 are great. They have a built in ANR and they were well worth the money. I'm on the CRJ so I couldn't tell how well they would work on the ERJ.
 
FAR Interpretations?

Wellll Mike,
The FARs require a headset below 18000ft. The FARs listed show a requirement for headset useage. "headset" is defined by the TSO process. There is nothing "incorrect" about my post. Select reading of the FARs might give you a warm and fuzzy feeling, but still leaves you just as wrong as intentional disregard.
As an airman we do not "interpret" the FARs, we comply, no more no less. My dog in this "fight" is correct FAR compliance, yours is......
PBR

PBRstreetgang,

This post is incorrect, also. There is a requirement to use a boom microphone below 18,000 not a headset.

Won't get in the mud with personal attacks, sorry.

Mike
 

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