Prior research demonstrated that, upon hearing a single phone, listeners differentiated between gay and heterosexual male talkers of American English. For instance, researchers found that listeners relied on three consonants (e.g., /l/, /n/, and /s/) to form their judgments. It is unclear whether these findings could be replicated and whether there are additional consonants that listeners used. To further explore this, 23 consonants were examined (e.g., /b/, /v/, /s/, /n/, /t/, /f/, /Ér/, /dĘ/, /θ/, /k/, /Éš/, /m/, /l/, /g/, /d/, /Ę/, /w/, /p/, /Él/, /Ę/, /z/, /j/, and /Ă°/). For 21 of these consonants, listeners heard two tokens each, and heard one token of /θ/ and /Ă°/. Results were mixed. Listeners relied on both instances of /s/, /w/, /Él/, and /z/ to form their judgments, while they relied on only one instance of /b/, /n/, /Ér/, /dĘ/, /k/, /Éš/, /l/, /d/, /Ę/, /p/, and /j/. Listeners didnât rely on any instances of /v/, /t/, /f/, /g/, /m/, and /Ę/; they relied on /Ă°/ and did not rely on /θ/. The only consistent finding, across multiple experiments, is that participants used /s/. Under certain circumstances, they may use additional consonants, but it doesnât appear as if they use them consistently.