Sure, I'll elaborate: I've been talking to Oticon since September about demoing their product. But because I live in Hawaii, where they have not had a vendor established yet, I haven't been able to try one yet. I've gone as far as traveling to Texas to have work done on my BP100, but sure enough the audiologist there hasn't had much experience with programming it (from September to just a few weeks ago during a third trip). While I was there, I tracked down through Oticon a vendor to get me started on the Ponto. Everything was set up for me to visit them (they had spoken with Oticon before my visit to fit me in as a special case because of my one week time constraint.) Well, after a few phone calls they never took me in and I flew back here to Hawaii emptyhanded. A waste of a week traveling, and a waste of money. So Oticon, knowing I've been pursuing this for about half a year now finally just decided to send me a unit and an invoice for a discounted price to make up for my trouble with a 90-day return clause to it. I'll have to find someone to program it, which they assured me an audiologist familar with Oticon can do out here. They've already referred me to someone. So in a few days I'll have it.
Now why am I so adament about the Ponto? Well, for one, the BP100 isn't usable in this condition. And no audiologist seems capable of devoting the time to make it work for me. Seriously, beyond initial programming to my audiogram no one has even tried to go into and tweak the high, mid, and low frequency gain capabilities of it... But yet, I still pay for every office visit regardless of leaving better than when I came in. So frankly, I'm fed up with it. And I've worn Oticon bone conduction hearing aids my entire life with NO issues whatsoever. I actually do have pretty good hearing, but it's purely conductive. So in addition to freeing myself from the headband aid, a clearer signal path that a bone-anchored device would provide is always nice.
As far as what I've read about the Ponto, it comes from various posts here, at the Yahoo BAHA_PLL group and at the Baha Users Support Forum. Specifically, I prefer the use of a rolling wheel volume control the Ponto offers as well. I use one now and it's perfect for being flexible on the fly. The BP100's tiny, hard rubber buttons are too impractical for heavy use having to press against the abutment to adjust programs or volume, in my opinion. I speak from experience, as I've worn aids my entire life.
Really, I'm not trying to be negative here. But this BP100 has cost me a lot more than just time and money. I've had to put career plans on hold and now look to paying out of pocket just to buy a hearing aid that might work since I've already used my insurance benefit to buy the BP100.