Are you sure they were actual bone-conducting headphones? I’ve seen quite a few offerings on Scamazon and the like that say bone conducting in the listing but aren’t actually bone conducting.
I wear a BC headset for the entirety of my workday with music playing pretty much constantly at a moderate volume and can carry on a conversation just fine without taking them off, and when I’m listening to a focus playlist (instrumentals, no vocals or high energy songs) I don’t even have to pause playback.
Do you get vertigo normally? This is fascinating to me.
They are real shokz open run headphones. I’m not trying to shit on people that use them they just seem to suck for me. The extra charge cable also pisses me off.
She has better hearing than I do but when listening to a podcast they are loud enough she can’t hear normal talking volume. Like I can stand next to her and say something and if she doesn’t see me she can’t hear me. It’s bad enough that she told me to buy her the cheap independent ear headphones I use as a gift in the future because she’s annoyed by it.
I never get vertigo and have crazy good balance. I haven’t fallen over in a decade and I ski and mountain bike a lot. I think the headphones vibrate some part of my ear that is part of how I balance.
Edit: thinking about it it’s not vertigo I feel. It’s that I can feel my skull vibrating and it is absolutely awful. I can feel it shaking behind my eyes. So maybe I’m weird and can feel something most people can’t?
I wasn’t offended, just curious about your visceral reaction.
I think I understand better now, particularly that last bit; I’ve noticed that if I crank up the volume and listen to anything with deep or punchy bass (e.g. hip hop, or metal) that it’s uncomfortable inside my head. Not sure how else to explain that, but I generally use different headphones when I want to experience bass so it’s not a common sensation for me.
People have such varied reactions to stimuli, you’re probably just part of a fraction of the population that has a sensitive vestibular system - which might be related to your superior sense of balance.
Are you sure they were actual bone-conducting headphones? I’ve seen quite a few offerings on Scamazon and the like that say bone conducting in the listing but aren’t actually bone conducting.
I wear a BC headset for the entirety of my workday with music playing pretty much constantly at a moderate volume and can carry on a conversation just fine without taking them off, and when I’m listening to a focus playlist (instrumentals, no vocals or high energy songs) I don’t even have to pause playback.
Do you get vertigo normally? This is fascinating to me.
They are real shokz open run headphones. I’m not trying to shit on people that use them they just seem to suck for me. The extra charge cable also pisses me off.
She has better hearing than I do but when listening to a podcast they are loud enough she can’t hear normal talking volume. Like I can stand next to her and say something and if she doesn’t see me she can’t hear me. It’s bad enough that she told me to buy her the cheap independent ear headphones I use as a gift in the future because she’s annoyed by it.
I never get vertigo and have crazy good balance. I haven’t fallen over in a decade and I ski and mountain bike a lot. I think the headphones vibrate some part of my ear that is part of how I balance.
Edit: thinking about it it’s not vertigo I feel. It’s that I can feel my skull vibrating and it is absolutely awful. I can feel it shaking behind my eyes. So maybe I’m weird and can feel something most people can’t?
I wasn’t offended, just curious about your visceral reaction.
I think I understand better now, particularly that last bit; I’ve noticed that if I crank up the volume and listen to anything with deep or punchy bass (e.g. hip hop, or metal) that it’s uncomfortable inside my head. Not sure how else to explain that, but I generally use different headphones when I want to experience bass so it’s not a common sensation for me.
People have such varied reactions to stimuli, you’re probably just part of a fraction of the population that has a sensitive vestibular system - which might be related to your superior sense of balance.
Humans are weird. Thanks for the reply.