Quote:
Originally Posted by Deadster 
To answer the guys asking about the bass boost, I personally find the E5 bass boost incredibly subtle to the point of almost being undetectable. I think it's a pretty disappointing feature but I keep it turned on because it does make some difference in making the overall sound seem "bigger," but juuuust barely. If I didn't know that it was supposed to be a bass boost effect I wouldn't know what type of EQ to call it. I'm using it on an iPod Nano 5 and for the first time have experimented with using an iPod's built-in EQ. It makes a much bigger difference than the E5 bass boost feature does.
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The bass boost in the E5 is indeed subtle, much more subtle than most people are used to. I believe this is because the bass boost in the E5 is intended as a balance for phones that are a bit on the lean side. The boost is only about 3dB and comes on gradually from the lower mid-range. The bass boost therefore works much more line a traditional tone control rather than an EQ.
Hopefully, for those with a lean sounding pair of headphones, which many IEMs qualify, the E5's bass boost provides just enough low end fill such that the listener doesn't have to enable the EQ on the playback device.