Quote:
|
I'd say the Beyer sales & distribution lady couldn't really be bothered to look seriously after that. Not an entirely untypical attitude for sales & distribution members...
|

Sounded horrible. 30 Euro wasted.
Be a part of the community.
It's free, join today!
|
I'd say the Beyer sales & distribution lady couldn't really be bothered to look seriously after that. Not an entirely untypical attitude for sales & distribution members...
|

|
However, the pads will remain unidentified. That is really a shame, as they really sound better than the AKG velours pads.
![]() |
|
From the pics, I'm more than 90% sure they are DT660 pads.
What do you need for identification? |



|
Actually it's a tad weird how people who no doubt are connected to the Internet via a twisted-pair Ethernet cable at some point can be "disbelievers" when it comes to audio cables...
For any cable conductivity and cleanliness of signal matter (as little distortion as possible). Technically, what matters: conductive properties of material a cable's made with (silver's the best, as it remains conductive even when oxygenated, and has the best conductive properties out of all common metals, seconded by copper), arrangement of wires, and electromagnetic screening. So a cable that has wire arranged in twisted pairs (like Ethernet TP cable, see Wikipedia article) and has an EM shield, and has decent OFC wires in it, will sound better than AKG's stock stuff (which isn't shielded, or at least didn't use to be shielded). Analogue electric sound is transmitted as electric waves with a high frequency (the full term is "electric analogue", an electrical wave analogue to sound waves), so the better latency and lack of deformation in the electrical signal will result in cleaner, better-defined sound. |


