deafdude1 - Yes, I have. I've been discussing new HAs with my audie. I use a GNResound Canta 7 - the 770D in my right ear. I'm not too thrilled with the digital signal as of late. It's become very quiet, but I still hear okay but only on the third program mode. The other two programs are far too quiet (even though I've had them adjusted repeatedly). I trialed the 780D while my hearing aid was in the shop and had sigNIFICANTLY better hearing with it which I missed. I wish I had gotten that one instead of this one. But, no matter.
My audie is a big fan of Resound, Phonaks, and Unitron (he recommended a Unitron model for me). I've been seriously taking a look at the Unitron 360+. I've heard of the Phonak Naida's transpositional processing which (if I remember correctly) take the high frequencies and "pull" them down into the low frequency range. I'm not 100% comfortable with that and not sure how it would affect how I hear music (I wouldn't want my new HA to adversely affect that).
I Googled the specs of your GNResound Canta 7 and the specs make it good for mild to moderate hearing loss. Has your hearing gotten worse since you first purchased the GNResound Canta 7 and how long ago?
Fullsize Page 2 of GN Resound Canta 7 Behind the Ear 770D Technical Guide
specs of your GNResound Canta 7. I would have an aided score of 35db at 250Hz, 50db at 500Hz and NR at 1000Hz and above!
I have compared the Unitron 360+ vs. my Naida V UP:
Unitron 360+ gain/SPL:
125Hz 65db/122db
250Hz 67db/124db
500Hz 71db/128db
750Hz 76db/137db
1000Hz 82db/141db
1500Hz 70db/130db
2000Hz 70db/132db
3000Hz 64db/129db
4000Hz 56db/114db
Naida V UP gain/SPL:
125Hz 65db/123db
250Hz 68db/126db
500Hz 72db/130db
750Hz 76db/136db
1000Hz 82db/142db
1500Hz 73db/130db
2000Hz 70db/130db
3000Hz 65db/128db
4000Hz 60db/119db
Both are great, the Naida is about 2db better but you probably don't need the extra 2db As for the transpositional, I doubt my Naida has it activated since I hear nothing much above 2000Hz and all frequencies do sound different. I will ask my audiologist about this though, maybe I should try transpositional activated and see if this helps. Even if I hear the same sounds at high frequencies, I guess it's better than hearing nothing.
Your aided scores should be down to 20db or better with new hearing aids for all but the highest frequencies. Youd hear almost as good as someone with normal hearing! Id try it on the worse ear too, you might be surprised how much youll hear after 25 years!