|
-
Great White Shark
-
Great White Shark
Forgot about the 32 ohm making it very easy to drive these cans!!
Ivy i5-3570K|ASRock Z77E-ITX|Bitfenix Prodigy
16 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3-1600|Antec TruePower Trio 550W
MSI R6850 PE/OC (860/1100)
Ivy i7-3770|Intel DZ68DB|ThermalTake V9 BlacX Edition
32 GB G.Skill Ares DDR3-1866|Corsair AX850
Zotac 1060 Mini 6GB|Dragonfly 1.5 USB DAC
-
Hammerhead Shark
Thanks for the review, Pete! Any chance we could get some photos?
Core 2 Duo 6750
Antec P182
Abit IP35 Pro
4 GB DDR2 800 RAM
Asus Xonar D2
Panasonic SA-XR55 / Audio Technica ATH-A900
-
Great White Shark
 Originally Posted by Candyman
Thanks for the review, Pete! Any chance we could get some photos? 
Oh alright! But it will have to be from the guy I bought it from! 
It's at work and they don't allow cameras here. I will update the original post.
Ivy i5-3570K|ASRock Z77E-ITX|Bitfenix Prodigy
16 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3-1600|Antec TruePower Trio 550W
MSI R6850 PE/OC (860/1100)
Ivy i7-3770|Intel DZ68DB|ThermalTake V9 BlacX Edition
32 GB G.Skill Ares DDR3-1866|Corsair AX850
Zotac 1060 Mini 6GB|Dragonfly 1.5 USB DAC
-
Hammerhead Shark
If I might ask -- what issues make these cans uncomfortable for you over long periods of listening? Is it a problem with the pads or is it that the casing is too small or what?
Just wondering
IBM T43 - "Menardi"
Pentium-M 1.86, 2048 MB PC4200 DDR2, 60 GB HD, DVD/CD-RW Combo Drive, ATI X300 64 MB, 14.1" screen, Fingerprint reader
-
From what i remember from reading Head-Fi, the head-clamping is what causes the strain.
-
Great White Shark
For me, it's both the pads being too hard and casing is bit too small...
Ivy i5-3570K|ASRock Z77E-ITX|Bitfenix Prodigy
16 GB Corsair Vengeance DDR3-1600|Antec TruePower Trio 550W
MSI R6850 PE/OC (860/1100)
Ivy i7-3770|Intel DZ68DB|ThermalTake V9 BlacX Edition
32 GB G.Skill Ares DDR3-1866|Corsair AX850
Zotac 1060 Mini 6GB|Dragonfly 1.5 USB DAC
-
 Originally Posted by proxops-pete
For me, it's both the pads being too hard and casing is bit too small...
Damn, hammerstein was dead-on.
-
Just picked some up for $60
My use will be monitoring/surgery mixing of some elements, in conjunction with my Yamaha MSP5s monitors.
As soon as I pulled them out I thought there was nothing in the box, but they were just that light.
Of course I turned on a few records that I knew. I knew exactly how they sounded due to extensive listening/mixing in the past.
I was amazed by very linear frequency response, with only slightly lacking
low frequency spectrum (which is not a bad thing, considering most of the time headphones are bumped in the lows). I would say 2-3 decibel low frequency difference deficiency compared to my monitors.
Now back to listening.
The song/instrument separation was pretty amazing, where I could hear every element separated (in a good way), with no apparent bumps in the high frequencies (major issue I had with most headphones in the same price range).
The headphones were almost boring
ONLY because they are so linear, it's ridiculous!
Anything that I have mixed in the past and messed up was dead obvious here, no doubts, just thoughts of remixing my mistakes.
These are definitely NOT consumer headphones, they are perfect for finding the perfect instrument balance, and not being confused for a good mix where the mistake resides. Much more accurate than AKG 240s, ATH-M50, Sennheiser HD280s, and other headphones in this price range.
-
Thanks for the review on the audio device. Will check the price to see if it's worth to buy.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|