klogg4

klogg4 t1_j1mrrlo wrote

No, it doesn't. Actually the only mid-fi headphone I have tried that has shouty 1 khz was Yamaha MT8, other mid-fi phones had pretty linear mids, or had problems in other places rather than 1 khz. It really is only an issue with hi-end headphones, Audeze in particular. Haven't tried TOTL Sonys though.

Talking about HD650/600/6xx and others from this series - this is the only headphone in the world that doesn't give me any ear fatigue at sane levels of volume. The most comfortable sound signature in the world. They really may feel dull compared to other headphones, mid-fi included, but it is worth getting used to that sound sig, because balance between details and fatigue is perfect.

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klogg4 t1_j1mo70z wrote

The hugest flaw of almost every planar and most high-end headphones in general I have heard is 1 khz peak, and 1266 TC has rather huge one. Why should I get used to shouty phones that give me fatigue very quickly? 1 khz peak doesn't give me any more information that I already hear, nor it makes sound more natural, but it absolutely gives me fatigue. It's a huge flaw to me.

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klogg4 t1_j1lybep wrote

>it sounded so hollow like the character was speaking into an empty pringles can, and footsteps sounded like corrupted sound files.

Your ears didn't lie to you, DT770 really do have this effect. The reason is a dip at 200 hz, it can make voices sound hollow. G Pro X do not have this dip, thus the difference in sound.

Any headphone is a combination of perks and flaws that either makes you have fun or makes you do some specific task better. I have never heard flawless headphones personally, all of them have flaws.

>He later laughs at me for not knowing the true quality of sound or what a real studio headset sounds like.

Headphones are usually called studio for the other reasons rather than having high sound quality. DT770 in particular are made for tracking vocals and instruments, they're comfortable, durable and they make you feel comfortable while singing, that's why they're called studio headphones. Not because of their sound quality.

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klogg4 t1_j128kbp wrote

You can also have some great experience with Musepack (sounds amazing, no generation loss because it's subband), but the problem is general compatibility - I refused it because I couldn't transfer it to my smart watch and to friends through messengers. Shame, because it's my favourite free open source format, I like it even more than Opus for my tasks.

To my experience AAC FDK VBR 5 is good. Bitrate is something like 200-210 kbps. Sound is generally transparent to me.

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klogg4 t1_iybll6o wrote

The thing you're missing is that HD560s actually have very decent, pretty linear and low distortion bass down to 40hz. Saying that they do not focus on bass is pretty much ignorant because they're one of the best hi-fi targeted headphones in this regard (better than whole HD6** series, Hifimans and lots of other headphones). The problem here is not the headphones itself, it's the fact that topicstarter boosted bass in damn Sony XM4 with already boosted bass.

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klogg4 t1_iy9ug6k wrote

What did ASR notice? They only said they were surprised that Ether CX weren't superloud. Nothing else. If you had enough volume, you were good (you HAD enough volume... X2HR is a very efficient headphone that can be driven by a mobile phone, and Asgard is a crazily powerful amp).

Btw - term "driving" means having enough volume and that's all. It has nothing to do with the sound signature.

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klogg4 t1_iy8gh7d wrote

Actually I was wrong about Qudelix, it is not that convenient there, because the app does not have a calculator. It only has the mV level on the right of the headroom regulator. For example you get 1e+2 there, 1e+2 is 100, so you get 100mV, means 0.1VRMS. https://www.headphonesty.com/headphone-power-calculator/ - you can calculate the else here.

I was wrong because FiiO devices really have this calculator built into the app and it's connected to the volume level, so you enter sensitivity and impedance of your headphones and get output power and DBFS in return. It's the most convenient way.

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klogg4 t1_iy7n7cv wrote

If you have FiiO BTR, Qudelix 5k or smth like that, then there is a convenient way - through a built in calculator in an app. Otherwise there's not.

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