Just found your excellent review. I recently picked up a pair of QCUs open box at Best Buy. I have been comparing them with my older NC700s (bought on sale at the outbreak of Covid to get me through lockdown) and my APMax. I agree with many of the points you put forward.
Compared to the NC700s, the ANC is improved, although at the expense of a slight white noise “hiss” which was absent on the 700s. I don’t find in intrusive, but it is there. The mids are improved in clarity, although the soundstage is quite narrow, and the bass needs to be turned down on the EQ in the app, otherwise it’s far too intense and bloated. I have it down to -5. I feel Bose missed a beat here by simply reusing the drivers from the 700s, rather than coming up with something new.
I usually listen to my 700s wired through an external dac/dongle, either my Fiio KA11 or iFi Uno. This bypasses the internal processor and massively improves the overall sound quality. When I do this on the QCUs, there is little change in sound quality.
As far as overall build quality goes, it seems to be a step backwards from the 700s. They’ve replaced the stainless steel in the headband with aluminium, and on the 700s the earcups were made of glass fibre reinforced nylon, where these seem to be made of a polymer plastic like polycarbonate. Comfort, to me at least, is unchanged, but they feel a bit flimsy compared to the 700s.
Compared to the APM, they can’t come anywhere close to the build quality, but little can. I find myself using them more than the Apple cans simply as the APM are too heavy. The Spatial Audio on the APM is far superior. I agree with your assessment about the Spatial Audio on the QCUs. It’s like pulling something with a flexible tether rather than a rigid one. Again, there is no ANC hiss on the APM at all. The APM have a much wider soundstage, but the mids are less forward and seem to blend into the music, where mids on the QCU are more forward and prominent. Bass on the APM is much better, being far clearer and less bloated. The controls on the APM are better as well. The Digital Crown for volume control is far more precise than the capacitive strip on the QCU and again, the quality of the buttons leaves the Bose in the dust. They feel like they’ve been properly engineered, and not added simply because they’re needed.
You may have seen it, but have a look at @Resolve’s review of the Bose QCU on YT.
Thanks again for a great review.
Compared to the NC700s, the ANC is improved, although at the expense of a slight white noise “hiss” which was absent on the 700s. I don’t find in intrusive, but it is there. The mids are improved in clarity, although the soundstage is quite narrow, and the bass needs to be turned down on the EQ in the app, otherwise it’s far too intense and bloated. I have it down to -5. I feel Bose missed a beat here by simply reusing the drivers from the 700s, rather than coming up with something new.
I usually listen to my 700s wired through an external dac/dongle, either my Fiio KA11 or iFi Uno. This bypasses the internal processor and massively improves the overall sound quality. When I do this on the QCUs, there is little change in sound quality.
As far as overall build quality goes, it seems to be a step backwards from the 700s. They’ve replaced the stainless steel in the headband with aluminium, and on the 700s the earcups were made of glass fibre reinforced nylon, where these seem to be made of a polymer plastic like polycarbonate. Comfort, to me at least, is unchanged, but they feel a bit flimsy compared to the 700s.
Compared to the APM, they can’t come anywhere close to the build quality, but little can. I find myself using them more than the Apple cans simply as the APM are too heavy. The Spatial Audio on the APM is far superior. I agree with your assessment about the Spatial Audio on the QCUs. It’s like pulling something with a flexible tether rather than a rigid one. Again, there is no ANC hiss on the APM at all. The APM have a much wider soundstage, but the mids are less forward and seem to blend into the music, where mids on the QCU are more forward and prominent. Bass on the APM is much better, being far clearer and less bloated. The controls on the APM are better as well. The Digital Crown for volume control is far more precise than the capacitive strip on the QCU and again, the quality of the buttons leaves the Bose in the dust. They feel like they’ve been properly engineered, and not added simply because they’re needed.
You may have seen it, but have a look at @Resolve’s review of the Bose QCU on YT.
Thanks again for a great review.