I have two Sordin earmuffs. They are wonderful. My only complaint is the difficulty getting the first battery in/out which, I think, is unnecessarily difficult.
I'd like to know when those SFA rings are available. It'd be great for indoor use. EDIT: I bought the SFA rings through an EU Dealer. Be aware that they're single packed even when called a kit. You need additional foam for the added volume. That foam is only in the 'Hygiene Kit SFA' (The Gel pads + foams) and not sold separately! So you have to buy 2x the SFA ring and a Hygiene Kit SFA to boost existing Supreme pro X. So why can't they put an upgrade kit together? I'll edit once more when I've been to the range.
Modular? I wouldn’t go as far as to say that Sordin’s products are modular. Why can’t I have an option to attach mice and radio when necessary and use headphones on its own most of the time? No… you have to buy both headphones.
Nice woman. I keep searching but cannot see whether it is a 4 pole contact for a mobile phone or just a 3 pole. I'd like a modular one with a detachable/foldable boom mic and able to connect it to a mobile phone. I do not want Bluetooth.
gotta hand it to the Swedes. they could make furniture (Ikea), fighter jets (Saab Gripen), recoilles rifles (Carl Gustaf), brand new fighter jet trainers (Red Hawk T-7A - a Boeing/Saab collaboration) and patrol/assault boat (Saab CB90). of which the last 3 the US Army/Marines are using, replacing the Northrop T-38 Talon jet traner of the US Air Force, and the other used by the US Navy. they have good quality manufacturing…
@@swedneck9054I've been looking into this and it's definitely confusing me. It seems that the peltor 500s have a superior nrr of 26, yet people tout that sordin is still better. Do you have an explanation?
NRR is very misleading, same for lumens. It doesn't tell you how well a device performs for its task. trevoronthetrigger.wordpress.com/2014/05/01/msa-sordin-supreme-performance-the-misleading-nrr18db-rating/ multimedia.3m.com/mws/media/600634O/e-a-r-log-20-truth-about-nrr.pdf
@@eunit14 : They test different frequency ranges and some are relevant to shooting and some are not. Some earmuffs are better with low frequency and some with high. The NRR is an "average", so that can mean that a muff with a lower NRR can still be better when shooting than a muff with higher NRR rating. I experienced that myself with the Peltor Sporttac (26DB) and the Peltor Protac (32DB). The Sporttac is way more expensive but has a lower NRR than the Protac.... I used both on the range and the Sporttac was way better, while on paper the Protac should have been better. Kept the Sporttac, sent the Protac back. I'm switching now to the Sordin SFA, because I want maximum protection for large caliber indoor shooting.