The_D0lph1n

joined 1 year ago
[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

There are the people who talk about which cables to use to make the sound brighter or warmer or whatever. All sorts of odd tweaks and somewhat suspect suggestions on improving sound quality.

That stuff just doesn't bother me. I ignore it, or politely decline the option. Some people are more... sensitive to the existence of that sort of thing.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Head-fi is way better than reddit for discussing headphones IMO. The voodoo doesn't bother me, I just ignore it if I need to. And the format is far more conducive to actually planning meets and discussing headphones than reddit is. People actually discuss the headphones rather than the stupid questions that constantly pop up here on reddit.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

That last bit is so true. It's way more fun to actually attend meets and know other people in person. It's far easier to share and explain listening impressions and I get a better sense of how different people hear things than in reading posts on the Internet. And the most obnoxious keyboard warriors are generally allergic to in-person interactions, so they basically never show up.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (5 children)

I go to meets (Head-fi has a forum for organizing meets in an area), I go to expos (haven't been to CanJam yet, but I went to Capital Audiofest this past month), and I demo at stores. The trick to store demos is to combine them with travel. If you are ever traveling somewhere for work or holiday or whatever, look up if there are any audio stores in the area you're visiting and see if you can add a visit to your itinerary. That's how I visited The Source AV near LA last week; I was in the area visiting my wife's family and took the time to visit the store. Note that few stores are dedicated to headphones. Most will mainly deal in speakers and may have a few headphones on the side. If you're looking at expensive headphones (I'd consider >$800 expensive), it really makes sense to wait for a demo opportunity before buying. If you're looking at the topmost echelon of cost, like several thousand dollars, I think it's absolutely worth spending a few hundred to travel to a store to demo a few pairs. Otherwise, no matter how many reviews you read online, you're still essentially gambling on the purchase.

I also never liked the buy then return process.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I've listened to both the double-sided and single-sided Tungstens, though at different events a month apart so I can't do a direct comparison. The Single-Sided version is hard to drive. It needs more power (particularly voltage) than a Susvara, which I was able to compare with at CAF.

Take this with a grain of salt, but I thought that non-feedback amplifiers didn't play well with the Tungsten. When I tried it on the HeadAmp CFA3, the amp was initially in zero feedback mode and I thought the vocals were way too upfront and the soundstage had width but little frontal depth. When I flipped the feedback switch to enable feedback, the vocals moved back and the soundstage opened up. It was not a subtle difference. I also tried the double-sided Tungsten with the Schiit Mjolnir 3 which also has a zero feedback mode, and I thought the vocals were too upfront there too, but I didn't check which feedback mode was used at the time. I wish I had been able to listen to it on my Ferrum Erco, as I've heard that Ferrum amps work well with it.

Sound-wise, I think it's good, with no flaws that stood out to me. It's darker than, say, a Hifiman Arya or HE1000, has more bass, and has a rich but mellow and not shouty vocal range. It's a bit like an old-style Audeze. In fact, I'd say that it sounds the most like how I remember the Audeze LCD-2 Classic that I demoed at a store once. Smooth, a bit bassy (but not bloated or boomy), but without the midrange tonal weirdness that the LCD-X has. I don't quite get the hype around them, but they're good headphones.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (2 children)

I think there are two different aspects at play here with "diminishing returns". First, there's the "objective" evaluation that others have mentioned. Spending twice the money won't give you a soundstage that's twice as wide, for example. Twice the money won't get you headphones that give you twice as many details. So in terms of these "technical" attributes, there are diminishing returns on how much more of any one quality you can get from spending more money.

On the other side, there's another subjective factor working against these "diminishing returns". I'm sure there's a psychology term for it, but I'll call it "the princess and the pea" effect. It comes from the fairy tale of the princess and the pea, with the idea being that a princess raised in luxury and comfy beds would find even a single pea under her mattress to be uncomfortable, while a person raised in normal circumstances with average beds wouldn't notice that pea. Once someone is beyond the point of diminishing returns, what often happens is that the small objective differences in performance make large differences in that person's enjoyment. That's where those 5% differences will make or break someone's enjoyment of a headphone.

My most recent example of that pea effect is when trying out the Stax SR-X9000 vs the Dan Clark Audio Corina at Capital AudioFest. Both of those headphones are extremely good. If I were to compare them side-by-side in any "objective" quality, they'd come out pretty close. But the Stax was just ever so slightly more open and layered in its positioning and imaging of sounds, and ever so slightly more reverberant with the trailing ends of notes, and slightly more relaxed and airier in its tuning, such that I found it significantly more enjoyable than the Corina. Again, they aren't that different in absolute performance levels, but in terms of my personal enjoyment of music, it wasn't even a contest, I'd pick the Stax every day and twice on Sunday (another funny English phrase).

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

A used 353x is probably the best value choice.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

That joke never made sense to me. It only works if the joker doesn't know how to pronounce Audeze.

For those who don't know, it rhymes with 'odyssey'. A long time ago, the name was spelled Audez'e to make it clear that the ending E is a separate syllable.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

As a new owner of a Walkman (Japanese ZX707), I was wondering why you were retiring your high-end Walkman and buying DAC/amps when your Walkman could have driven both of those headphones/IEMs just fine. Then I realized that in classic Sony fashion, there are two products in their catalogue that both end in "1AM2": there's the Walkman NW-WM1AM2 and the headphones MDR-1AM2. I presume you are retiring the headphones?

Naming collisions aside, congrats on the purchase! I may be joining the MDR-Z1R club soon!

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Oddly enough, I think I only bought 1 headphone this year. The Sony MDR-Z7M2. But the year isn't over yet! And I may pick up the Z1R soon.

But most of my purchases have been source gear. I bought the Ferrum Erco, a Stax SRM-353x, and a Japanese SKU Sony Walkman ZX707 to round out my collection of players, DACs, and amps.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I tried out the Stealth at CAF last weekend, and I think you described its strong points very well. It's very neutral and very precise in its rendering of sound. But to me, it wasn't comfortable due to an intense hotspot at the top of my head, and I didn't really get along with the sound. The aspects of sound that grew to annoy me on the Noire are still there in the Stealth. It rendered instruments as if they were played in a heavily sound-dampened or anechoic chamber. No decay to the sounds, notes just suddenly cut off. When I was A/B comparing it vs the Stax SR-X9000, the Stax was significantly more relaxed, open, and ultimately enjoyable to me. The Stealth sounded "uptight" in comparison, like it was trying too hard to be precise.

I don't want to be a downer, and I'm happy that you are properly enjoying all of the things that the Stealth excels at. I wish it fit better on my head, and I wish I enjoyed the sound more. It has basically perfect Harman Target adherence, so according to Dr. Olive's research, it should be the "perfect" sound. Maybe a bit too perfect for someone like me :)

 

While CanJam Dallas is going on this weekend, another audio show is happening much closer to home, Capital Audiofest in the Washington DC suburbs. It's mostly a speaker and hi-fi-focused show, so there weren't as many headphones there as in CanJam, but the upside is that there's less competition for the headphone stations. There was usually no line to demo things. I tried a number of headphones, many that I've been wanting to try for a long time. I'll give some brief impressions of each, along with some bonus comments from a friend who went with me and my wife. If anyone has questions, ask away in the comments.

Stax SR-X9000: The highlight of the show for me. It would win on comfort alone. It's so comfortable, with minimal excess clamp force and little vertical pressure either. No hotspots here! It's very open-sounding, with a layered presentation to sound, good soundstaging, and surprisingly good bass. I think the only issue I might have is that vocals seem pretty forward and emphasized here, but they have this sense of "floating in front of me" that lessens the irritation. It ticks basically every box in my list of good sound qualities. I'll definitely pick this up at some point.

Modhouse Audio Tungsten single-sided: Generally a good-sounding headphone that doesn't pair well with zero-feedback amps for me. Soundstaging and vocals were pretty intimate when listening on the CFA3 in zero-feedback mode, but flipping the switch to enable feedback moved vocals further back and made the headphone much easier to listen to. Nothing really stands out in the sound though; solid and weighty bass, inoffensive vocals, inoffensive treble. Good or bad depending on perspective. However, it requires huge amounts of power. Harder to drive than the Susvara!

Hifiman Susvara (on HeadAmp GSX): This is very good, but probably too similar overall to my Shangri-La Jr to have both. Susvara has more bass and a bit more incisiveness in the treble as well as a slightly richer midrange. SGL Jr has slightly wider/deeper soundstaging and openness and a bit more of a "delicate" sound. Wish I had brought my SGL to the show to compare directly, but I didn't have a good carrying case.

Abyss AB-1266 TC: Subwoofer on the head. Hilarious bass response. Extremely awkward to put on due to rigid headband structure and very uncomfortable. You also look like a Cyberman from Doctor Who while wearing them.
Bonus: my friend thought that the 1266 was by far the most memorable headphone at the show. He thought it was the only one where its bass approached that of speakers. Every other headphone's bass sounds like "headphone bass", while the 1266 had a bit of that "speaker bass".

Meze Empyrean 2: Disappointing. It's lost the distinctive Meze sound of the Empyrean/Elite, and has oddly soft bass impact. The X9000 has more "snap" and "slam" in the attack of bass notes than the Empy 2. I'd take either the "dreamy" and bassy sound of the original Empryean or the slightly sharper sound of the Elite over the Empyrean 2.
Bonus: my friend was also disappointed in the Empyrean 2. He thought it sounded "sterile". He thought the Elite was better even if it was noticeably coloring the sound.

Dan Clark Audio Stealth: Surprisingly poor comfort, unsurprisingly dull sound. There's a hotpot from the headband at the top of my head. Thought it would be more comfortable than the Aeon 2, but it's actually worse overall even though the earpads are better. Sound was meh, with the distinctive DCA dampened sound that makes everything sound kind of dead. I guess if you're a midrange fanatic like Dan Clark, then it would make sense, or if you're used to the sound of instruments in acoustically damped recording rooms, but I don't think it renders music in a convincing way. It's like a marble statue of a person, vs a living, breathing person with all of their quirks and flaws.

Dan Clark Audio Corina: More comfortable than the Stealth, but similar issues with the sound. I guess I'm just allergic to the DCA house sound. Compared to the X9000, it feels constricted in sound placement, it lacks the layering, and it lacks the air and openness of how notes decay. If you just want to focus on midrange, then sure, it's a different sound than your quintessential estat, but I wouldn't pick this over the X9000.

Audeze LCD-5: Very good bass, a bit shouty in the vocal range, not the most open sound and kind of average soundstage. I'm not the biggest fan of Audeze's new tuning direction.
Bonus: my wife liked the tapered earpads. She says it places less pressure on the jaw under/behind her ears. She wishes more headphones would do this.

Audeze MM-500 and MM-100: The 100 is more comfortable, and the 500 is slightly more incisive in notes with a more pronounced midrange while the 100 sounds a bit softer with a bit less emphasis on small midrange details. Both have the same general tuning I'd actually take the 100 over the 500, since I'm not a music producer who needs to mix the midrange with such precision.

Sony MDR-Z1R: Bassy, spacious, and slightly sharp in the treble. More comfortable than my MDR-Z7M2, more pronounced bass, and there's a bit of sharpness in the treble that comes out in some songs (e.g. "Titanium" by David Guetta feat. Sia). Other than that, it sort of takes all of the qualities of my MDR-Z7M2 up one notch. I might pick this up, as I quite liked the sound.
Bonus: my friend really didn't like the Z1R. He thought entire frequency ranges were missing when listening to it. He also wasn't a fan of my Z7M2.

Sennheiser HD820: Sounds fine. The soundstaging was great and the bass was good too. Female vocals were a bit more resonant and "breathy" (e.g. "Rolling In The Deep" by Adele). I compared it back-to-back with the DCA Ether 2 and I would actually pick the HD820 over the Ether 2 when listening to Adele. I didn't get a chance to try it with male vocals this time, and in a previous demo that's where it sort of fell apart and sounded very strange, like the vocalist went up one pitch.

Conclusion: I need to pick up Adele's album '21' ASAP. I used "Rolling In The Deep" as a demo song since one setup didn't have internet, and I realized that it sounds awesome. I've heard it on the radio many times back when it was the song du jour, but I have never realized how good it sounds on good audio gear.

[–] The_D0lph1n@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

I find it's pretty simple once you connect with one of their sensory hobbies. My wife isn't an audiophile, but we're both foodies, so she understands my comparing of headphones in the same way she compares the French fries that we get at different restaurants. One restaurant has thick-cut fries, another has thin fries, a third fries them twice for that extra crunch, a fourth has normal fries, but a really good curry dipping sauce (Brasserie Beck in Washington DC, for those curious). Just like she loves evaluating the fries at restaurants and compares their flavors and textures, she understands that headphones are objects - or experiences - that I evaluate in a similar way.

For other people, it's like keyboards. One of my friends really got into mechanical keyboards and built a whole bunch, many for himself, but also some as gifts for friends. He's all about the sound and the feel, the clack or thock, the resistance or springiness of each key. I never really got into keyboards in the same way, I'm fine with a Topre for work and a tactile gaming keyboard for play, but we understand each other's hobbies because we both understand the appeal of the underlying sensory experience.

I've never held a gun in my life, but from talking with people who have used guns, recreational shooting can be a similar sort of experience. Each gun has its own sound, its own recoil feel when fired, and its own action. Then there's also ammunition and lots of different aspects to the experience of shooting.

Yet others enjoy the feel of driving. I'm not one of those people, but I can understand how people enjoy the experience of controlling a fast-moving machine, making it stop and go, and directing its motion using your hands and feet. Once you compare the sounds of different headphones to the different driving feels of different cars, they can understand more easily.

I think the vast majority of people have some sensory experience that they enjoy and can discern quality in. Food, alcohol, cast iron pans, coffee, keyboards, cars, films, the list goes on and on. I think reasonable people can understand that headphones and audio are the sensory experiences that you enjoy and discern even if they don't discern them in the same way.

view more: next ›