Plaser,
I wish you luck trying to find an individual with equal hearing in both ears. I assume that you have not had a sudden change in your hearing, and are talking about normal differences (for example, it's very common for people who drive with the window down to have hearing loss in the left ear). Of course, there may be benefits to having your ears checked, but keep in mind that hearing tests are generally limited to only 8kHz.
There is a long-standing misconception on this issue. Your brain adapted to your asymmetrical hearing a long time ago, and has made periodic adaptations as your hearing has changed throughout your life. You hear EVERY sound through the same ears, warts and all, not just your stereo. Try an experiment--have another person speak to you from various directions and, with your eyes closed, point to where you hear the voice. If you haven't had a recent change to your hearing, I bet your finger aims directly at the person speaking. I also suspect you don't have a problem when listening to live music.
If I'm right, go diagnose and fix your stereo (or have it fixed). If, as a relative newbie, you need help finding where the problem lies, e-mail me.
I wish you luck trying to find an individual with equal hearing in both ears. I assume that you have not had a sudden change in your hearing, and are talking about normal differences (for example, it's very common for people who drive with the window down to have hearing loss in the left ear). Of course, there may be benefits to having your ears checked, but keep in mind that hearing tests are generally limited to only 8kHz.
There is a long-standing misconception on this issue. Your brain adapted to your asymmetrical hearing a long time ago, and has made periodic adaptations as your hearing has changed throughout your life. You hear EVERY sound through the same ears, warts and all, not just your stereo. Try an experiment--have another person speak to you from various directions and, with your eyes closed, point to where you hear the voice. If you haven't had a recent change to your hearing, I bet your finger aims directly at the person speaking. I also suspect you don't have a problem when listening to live music.
If I'm right, go diagnose and fix your stereo (or have it fixed). If, as a relative newbie, you need help finding where the problem lies, e-mail me.