CCA DUO - 2 x 7mm Dynamic Drivers IEM

K othic

New Head-Fier
Pros: Excellent build quality (metal + resin)
Improved comfort compared to recent KZ models
Impressive resolution (micro and macro)
Great choice for enjoying female vocals
Wide and deep soundstage
Cons: Priced at nearly $30 USD with the same accessories as IEMs that cost about half as much (same cable and tips as KZ Krila)
Thin signature with a lack of bass
High likelihood that some users may find them sharp in the high frequencies
CCA DUO: A Comparative Review

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Introduction

Today, I present a slightly different format than usual. Since the CCA DUO ($29 USD) showed a signature very similar to an IEM I often recommend, I wanted to do a purely comparative review. Let's see how the CCA DUO compares to the 7Hz Salnotes Zero ($20 USD).


If you wish to read this review in Spanish, click here

Check out previous reviews here (or in spanish here)



Disclaimers:
  • Many thanks to the folks at CCA (especially Duke) for sending me this product to provide my honest opinion.
  • Analysis over 4 days - Sessions of approximately 2 to 4 hours
  • All music used is lossless (Qobuz > 16bit – 44.1kHz)
  • Gear Used: IFI Zen Air Can (AMP) + Fiio E10K (DAC) / TempoTec Sonata HD PRO (dongle)


Unboxing, Build & Comfort

But first, a bit about the construction and accessories of the DUO.

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CCA DUO: As a sub-brand of KZ, CCA follows its parent brand building technique, featuring a metal faceplate and a transparent resin body (with dark tint). Despite certain similarities, this model is more compact in size compared to releases like the ZVX and the Krila. It houses two 7mm dynamic drivers inside and features the typical QDC-style connector on the outside, which the brand is known for. The nozzle is 5.8mm in diameter.

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Cable: KZ cable (silver-plated copper, cable feels thin and it is evident where they cut costs)

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Eartips: Three pairs of silicone (Starlines) and one pair of foam tips. Sufficient, and in this case, the foam tips make sense to tame some of the highs.

Comfort: As I mentioned, the DUO is smaller than other current KZ models, so it fits better to the ergonomics of my ear and doesn't protrude much. The provided tips seal properly, with the foam ones offering a bit more isolation than the silicone ones, but both types, when fitted well into the ear canal, tend to block external noises adequately.

Driveability: It doesn't necessarily require a DAC/AMP or dongle (although it benefits from one, as there are several IEMs that are easier to drive), with a sensitivity of 106dB/Vrms (@1kHz) and an impedance of 18 ohms.



Sound Description (vs 7Hz Salnotes Zero)

Scores (TL;DR for those who prefer a more concise format):
  • Better to worse (left to right)
  • More ">" indicates a greater difference
  • "=" is used to indicate that the model on the left and the one on the right are similar in a certain aspect
  • ">=" indicates that two IEMs could be similar depending on the song

Comfort: DUO = Zero (both very comfortable for extended use)

Subbass: Zero > DUO

Bass: DUO = Zero

Mids (male vocals): Zero >= DUO

Mids (female vocals): DUO >= Zero (with lower-register female singers, they are similar)

Mids (instruments): Zero > DUO (due to greater naturalness and better balance)

Treble: DUO > Zero (better quality but similar in quantity – DUO sharper)

Resolution: DUO >> Zero

Imaging: Zero > DUO (easier to locate bass)

Soundstage: DUO >= Zero


Observations:

Duo vs Zero.png

Credits: Audio Reviews News

The extension in the subbass region is good in both sets, but the boost that the Zeros have in that area allows them to not get so hidden in the signature (the DUO's lack is noticeable in songs from the album "Live After Death" where at times the bassist disappears or becomes very difficult to find). For this reason, there is also better differentiation between bass and subbass, although neither of these two IEMs achieves a significant impact in the 80 to 200 Hz range. The CCA IEM's driver is faster compared to the Zero.

While both of them do not have a strong presence in the lower midrange, the lower-register vocal ranges have more authority in the Zeros, making them excellent for singers like Sinatra. For singers with higher-pitched voices like Amy Winehouse, the CCA DUO manages to push these ranges forward just a bit more than the Zeros, giving them the spotlight.

It's worth noting that the clarity of vocal registers is usually higher in the DUO simply due to a lesser elevation in the bass region.

Listening to Megadeth, the sense of definition in instruments like electric guitars stands out more in the DUO compared to the Zeros. However, this certain thinness in the signature makes instruments that can reach higher notes (just like the mentioned guitars) take the spotlight, but in doing so, they lose a bit of coherence in other music genres like orchestras, where higher strings such as violins and violas will always have a prominent place in front of winds or lower strings. Trumpets and violins "compete" for the lead role in "Swan Lake, Op. 20, TH. 12 / Act I: No. 1 Scène (Allegro giusto)."

Despite what was mentioned about the DUO’s midrange, the microresolution is spectacular for its price, and small details in the chorus of "Miss You" are heard with ease and precision. So, the Zero is for those who prefer naturalness or a more balanced sound, while the DUO would be better suited for more analytical users.

I find that the treble at moderate and slightly higher levels are somewhat more exaggerated and piercing in the DUO, but the difference is not immense. To put it in words, the Zeros approach the limit of being strident, while the DUO surpasses it in certain songs. Again, the level of detail here is very good, exceeding that of the Zeros.

The soundstage has similar width and depth (both above average in their respective price ranges). If I had to take a guess, I'd say that the DUO achieves slightly more depth in live albums.

There is a good degree of separation between the instruments reproduced by each pair of headphones, but I have to give the imaging to the Zero. It's not because the Zero has a more capable driver or anything similar, but as I mentioned earlier, the DUO can, on several occasions, make the user lose track of the bassist's location or not provide a sufficient impact in the execution of the drum kicks, affecting the placement of certain instruments.



Conclusion

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Does the DUO present a significant improvement to justify the $10 USD price difference? Yes and no. In terms of the driver, it's noticeable that the DUO has a superior capability for reproducing small details that are hard to perceive. However, music isn't solely about the meticulous analysis of sounds, so I also value a proper balance between frequencies and the harmony of the ensemble of instruments. This is where I believe the CCA IEM can't compete with the Zero, and personally, I found myself spending more time with the latter for the enjoyment of my music.
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baskingshark

Headphoneus Supremus
Pros: Solid build
Good ergonomics
Moderately easy to drive
U-shaped profile with decent bass quality
Above average technicalities for a budget dual DD
Cons: Dearth of accessories
Shells may be fingerprint and scratch magnets
Not for treble-sensitive peeps - bright tuning with sibilance
Not for bassheads
Anemic note weight, slightly metallic timbre
DISCLAIMER

I would like to thank KZ/CCA for furnishing this unit. The Duo can be gotten here (no affiliate links): https://www.kztws.com/products/cca-duo

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SPECIFICATIONS

  • Driver configuration: 7 mm + 7 mm dual dynamic drivers (no info on diaphragm materials)
  • Impedance: 18 ohm
  • Frequency response: 20 Hz - 40 kHz
  • Sensitivity: 106 dB
  • Cable: 2-pin, 0.75 mm, silver-plated cable
  • Tested at $29 USD (non-mic version); $30 USD (mic version)

ACCESSORIES

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Other than the IEM, the following are included:
- 3 pairs of KZ "Starline" silicone tips (S/M/L)
- 1 pair of foam tips
- Cable

The accessories are pretty lacking, with no case provided. But I guess as it is a budget IEM, costs have to be cut somewhere.


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The KZ Starline silicone tips are one of the most ubiquitous tips, and most CHIFI aficionados would have encountered them in their IEM journey. The foamies tame treble and increase isolation, and they synergize well with the bright Duo (we will talk more about its sound signature later); albeit foam tips are not be so durable and may also compress the soundstage.

The stock silver-plated cable, though on the thinner side, is surprisingly quite microphonic-resistant. Unfortunately, it does not come with a chin cinch, and is a bit tangly.

The rest of this review was done with the stock cable and stock starline silicone tips. No aftermarket accessories were used, so as not to add any confounders to the sound.



BUILD/COMFORT

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The triangular face-plates are fashioned from 3D-printed metal. They are mirror-like and shiny, but may be fingerprint or scratch magnets. The inner aspects of the earpieces seem to be made of a resin/plastic material, and the shells are light and relatively well-fitting - I have no complaints on the ergonomics.

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Isolation is bang average, in view of the vented shells. I did not encounter any driver flex, though this is partially dependent on ear anatomy and type of tips used.


DRIVABILITY

I tested the Duo with the following sources:
- Apple dongle
- Cayin RU7
- Colorfly CDA M1 DAC/AMP dongle
- Creative Sound Blaster X5
- E1DA DAC/AMP dongle
- Hiby R3 Pro Saber 2022 DAP
- Khadas Tone Board -> Schiit Asgard 3 amp
- Khadas Tone Board -> Topping L30 amp
- Questyle M15 DAC/AMP dongle
- Sony Walkman NW A-55 DAP (Walkman One WM1Z Plus v2 Mod)
- Sony Walkman NW A-55 DAP (Walkman One Neutral Mod)
- Sony Walkman NW WM1A DAP (Walkman One WM1Z Plus v2 Mod)
- Smartphone

This IEM is moderately easy to drive, though it scales slightly with amplification.


SOUND & TECHNICALITIES

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Graph of the CCA Duo, via IEC711 coupler. 8 kHz is a coupler artefact peak.

Tonally, the Duo can be described as having a bright U-shaped profile.

The Duo is sub-bass focused. The sub-bass extends quite deep with authority and decent rumble, though it is just slightly north of neutral in quantity, and is not for bassheads. In terms of quality, bass texturing is above average with moderate speed, with just a sprinkle of mid-bass bleed.

As per the U-shaped tuning, the lower mids are slightly pulled back. This area is still quite transparent, with no big bad bass to bite into this frequency band. The upper midrange has a 6 dB ear gain, and with no copious bass to balance out this region, female vocals are forwards and just at the edge of shoutiness.

The Duo is a treble-emphasized IEM, and this region has good air and extension. This gives a lot of clarity and resolution, though on the flip-side, sibilance rears it ugly head, and there are over-emphasized cymbals and high-hats heard. Indeed, treble-sensitive folk should stay away, but trebleheads might fall in love with the tuning.

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Technicalities-wise, I would class the Duo as above average at its price point. As per the boosted upper frequencies, this brings a lot of resolution and clarity to the mix. Micro-detailing is acceptable, and imaging and instrument separation are quite decent. Soundstage is average in width, but above average in height and depth.

Timbre is sadly a tinge metallic, with an anemic and thin note weight. Vocals can hence sound unnaturally nasal and scrawny as such.


COMPARISONS

Comparisons were made with other budget dual DD sets. Planars, single DDs, hybrids and pure BA types were left out of the equation as the different transducers have their pros and cons.

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TRI Star River

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Graph of the TRI Star River via IEC711 coupler. 8 kHz is a coupler artefact peak.

The Star River is a dual DD set with 4 purported tuning options. However, on actual testing, there are only 2 distinct V-shaped old-school tonalities (ie switches are a gimmick). The Star River's QC is also a bit dodgy, with one side of the earpieces having stuck switches that require huge force to manipulate.

Compared to the Duo, the Star River is definitely more V-shaped, and has more bass and treble. It is shoutier as such in the upper midrange/lower treble, and is even more fatiguing than the Duo.

The Star River has worse soundstaging, but otherwise has improved imaging, micro-detailing and instrument separation.


Truthear Zero (Original)

The Zero is bassier in the sub-bass, though its bass isn't as tight and clean as the Duo's. Both sets are thin in the lower mids, but the Zero is shoutier in the upper midrange.

Technicalities are weaker on the Zero, it has worse separation, micro-details and imaging.


CONCLUSIONS

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The CCA Duo is dual DD U-shaped pair, with above average technical chops. Build, ergonomics and drivability are plus points, though the lack of accessories is disappointing.

Unfortunately, the Duo has some tonal flaws, suffering from a thin note weight with metallic timbre. It is also not for treble-sensitive brethren, due to a bright soundscape with sibilance in abundance. Bassheads may find the bass quantities wanting, but this set goes for quality over quantity in the bass.

In a nutshell, the Duo has some shortfalls (especially in treble and timbral accuracy), but otherwise does more things right than wrong. Actually, I would class it as an above average entrant to the dual DD game. Sadly, it might be forgotten in a few weeks' time, such is the competitiveness of the cut-throat budget CHIFI market, that being average (or even above average) is akin to a death sentence. Or a greater likelihood, is that a pro version of this KZ/CCA might come out mere days after this review is written!
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DarenLee

New Head-Fier
Time = Love & Appreciation.
Pros: Good sound separation.
Lushful mid bass.
Light weight.
Easy fit comfort.
Cons: Not enough low rumbling bass for bass head music
Price point competitive.
CCA DUO
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First of all kudos to CCA taking our suggestion for not using the random 3 letter model name which many fans and enthusiasts like myself can’t keep track on it anymore.

DUO is an IEM you need to take time to appreciate the tuning.
I believe CCA is going for a more mature audiophile tuning rather than an entry level IEM such as the famous CCA CRA.


MID
Mids & Mid bass does sounds rich & lushful making vocal sounding prominent.

BASS
bass doesn’t lingers too long, the bass is fast and quick making is sounds clean & punchy.

TREBLE
Enough treble but not pitchy.
Treble at its comfort zone.


Notes
  • It’s frequency of bass, mid and treble very well separated making it sounds good in instrument separation.
  • Amount of the bass sounded polite but punchy. Some (fans of heavy bass) might probably say not sufficient enough.

  • Suitable for….For work - as both bass and treble not over powered making using long hours comfortable.
Very suitable for night time listening sessions.
Listeners who listens to wide range of different genre music
People who like loud volume listening, it still feels intimate and not ear aching.

  • Not suitable for
People who love to have low rumbling bass

  • Impressions from random listeners.
Wong - smooth, for vocal, high treble not pitchy.
Agnes (not audiophile) - nice, good sound, pleasant sound.


COMPARISON
The sound signature reminded me of DQ6s hence I dig out from my archive to compare.
DQ6s - more lower frequency bass.
Duo - better treble, better treble detail.
Duo would be the improve version with more definition and more pin point instrument separation.

SeeAudio Yume Midnight
Duo - more treble, natural analogue sounding treble, punchy bass
Yume Midnight - less treble, cleaner digital treble, more smooth velvet sounding bass. Overall sounded more resolving.
Both really comes very very close sounding, Yume Midnight still sounds more resolving and more details presentation overall.
Take note: SeeAudio Yume Midnight uses 1DD+2BA drivers and they are price around USD200.

Blind test, Agnes (non audiophile perspective/impression)
Midnight vs Duo
Midnight - treble better details, bass is define. Vocal less.
Duo - Overall more full sounding. Treble less details, bass & vocal good.


Listening Sessions worth mentioning.


Axel F. Harold Faltermeyer (the bad boys movie theme song) ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Song like this sounds perfect bringing out the nostalgic 80’s Roland Synthesizer & Moog.

Plastic Love - Mariya Takeuchi ⭐⭐⭐⭐
This track is a city pop genre song which have a lot of instruments arrangement together.
I hear very clearly piano and violin playing which I seldom take note before despite listening to this song many times. This exhibits strong mids and great sound separation.

Say So - Japanese Version (tofu beats remix) ⭐⭐⭐
This track is an up beat bassy pop song.
Despite comparing with other IEM which have more sub bass than DUO listening to this track I still felt much satisfaction and enjoyable.

Don’t Stop Me Now - The Regrettes ⭐⭐
Bass kicks seems to be overpowered other instrument. Take note this recording approach is those low-fi very analogue sounding contains grainy sounding in it’s recording process (nothing wrong with the IEM)

I have been listening constantly from 2-3 weeks, 3-5 hours a day with all sort of songs and overall it’s been enjoyable average ⭐⭐⭐️ to ⭐⭐⭐⭐

I have been trying out EQ lately with my Wiim Mini.
EQ works very well with DUO brings out different flavours base on your music genre and likings.

Using a more decent headphone DAC/Amp (iFi Zen DAC v2) give you more sense of head room and wider width and better depth sounding.
But in terms of sound signature this pairing makes DUO sounds more warm/darker (compare to my previous Wiim Mini streamer (with flat - no EQ adjusted).
On Zen DAC Duo can handle iFi bass boost featured without any distortion.

Perform well for vocal tracks.

Believe to be tune close to harman tuning sound signature (some research by Harman institute some sort…)

I would IEM can consider a warm natural close to neutral sounding.

Recommended ear tips Moondrop Spring Tip, I tried the foam tip came with KZ IEM it drowns the treble details.



CONCLUSION
If you love smooth sounding this is a good one.
If I buy this with my own money am I happy with this purchase? Yes.
My personal score 7/10



About me:
  • I am a IEM hobby enthusiast who started this crazy IEM journey since 2019
  • I am not young hence I am not sensitive to treble.
  • My audio setup are mostly minimalist setup (iPhone, IPad Pro & WiiM Mini)
  • My interest and goal mostly it’s to find great price with great performance stuff.
  • I don’t do this to make a living, it’s just pure hobby.
  • I usually try my best not to use too in depth technical terms.
  • 60-70% of my write up I buy my own stuff, sometimes community friends and dealer and manufacture send me IEM for write up.
  • I love taking photos of IEMs (depending on my time).
  • CCA sent me this set for my write up, no money involve.
Gear used
- mostly on IPhone & IPad Pro with usb/lightning DAC (BGVP T01s, Avani, Abigail, CX Pro)
- sometimes desktop laptop with iFi Zen DAC / Megatron from VE Electronic.
- Tidal on iOS App, MQA/FLAC.
- WiiM Mini on Tidal.
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T
Tswong1969
I like this comment :Very suitable for night time listening sessions. Indeed, I have a same feeling too when listening to this IEM.
DarenLee
DarenLee
Thank you bro. Yes sometime some IEM for work and night time needed certain type of sound signature.

Headphones and Coffee

Previously known as Wretched Stare
One of the best Dual DD for the cost
Pros: Great build, Price and the sound
Cons: The accessories are sparce.
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Packaged in the typical KZ/CCA packaging simple and sturdy is the less than simple CCA Duo a dual dynamic IEM with two 7mm Dynamic Drivers, with dual magnet arrays, and dual cavities each shell.
I found them to be comfortable and they provided good isolation.

Technical Specifications
Configuration → 2 x 7mm DD
Sensitivity → 106 ± 3 dB
Impedance → 18 ± Ω
Frequency Response → 20 Hz – 40000 Hz
Cable → 1,2m 5N copper silver-plated cable with 0.78mm 2-PIN connector
Plug Type → L-shaped gold plated 3,5mm jack connector.
In the Box
The CCA Duo
The detachable 2-PIN cable
One set of KZ Starline tips (S, M, L sizes) and one pair of foam tips
User manual

Sound:

Bass:
Thew CCA Duo presents with well controlled and very clear Bass, lows are present and have depth but are more of a quality Bass than a thunderous impact. Texture is good but Bass in general is neutral, fast and detailed.
Mids:
The Midrange is very well detailed with a forward center position. Vocals sound a little in front of the instruments and thinner and colder than I was expecting. Still, it has a refreshing charm that shines with female vocals.
Treble:
The highs are surprisingly airy and smooth with a nice fine details and good separation.
Soundstage ETC:
The soundstage is open and has a decent width, depth and height in equal proportion. There is fairly accurate imaging.

Conclusion: The CCA Duo is a refreshing new tunning from the company and a few fine tunings, and it could be amazing. If you are into a more neutral kind of Bass, this might be interesting.

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suicideup

New Head-Fier
CCA DUO Review!
Pros: A well-tuned, Harman-sounding IEM.

Balances both technical and tonal performance quite well for its price.

Fun, all-rounder sound.

Clean, thick lows.

Clear, open mids.

Decently extended, sparkly treble.

Average-above average technical performance.

Excellent fit, comfort, and isolation.

Very good build quality.

Easy to drive.
Cons: Slight peaks are present on the upper mids on sibilant prone tracks.

Minimal accessories for its asking price.

Mids may sound thin at times.
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CCA DUO Review!
(Tagalog Review here: )
Good day! After 5 days of casual and critical listening, here’s my written review for the CCA Duo. One of the boys!


Disclaimer:
  • I don’t read FR graphs. I only use my ears, as how earphones should be used.
  • KZ sent this unit to me in an exchange for an honest, unbiased review. Rest assured that this review will do its best to devoid from any bias/es as much as possible.
  • The following remarks and observations shall be made and owned only by me.
  • No monetary compensation is/was involved before, during, and after the period of creation of this review.
  • Your mileage may (and always, will) vary.
Burn-in time: 4-8 hours per day, 5 days.

Source/s used:
  • - Hiby R3 Pro Saber
  • - Fosi Audio DS1
  • - Non-HiFi smartphone (Infinix Note 12 G96), PC.
  • - Shanling UA1 Plus
  • - Sony Xperia X Compact
  • -Local Files via Foobar, YouTube Music, Deezer, and Qobuz with UAPP.
IEM/Earbud/Setup configuration: stock large clear eartips, any form of EQ or MSEB off, 3.5 SE plug, 40-60% volume, low gain and high gain.

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Sound signature:
  • Much like most Harman-tuned IEMs, the CCA Duo is a u-shaped, fun-sounding set. When paired with a neutral-sounding source, it may sound “neutral” to most ears.
Lows:
  • The CCA Duo’s bass is clean, punchy and textured. Midbass and subbass quantity exhibits a good balance on this set. Attack and decay leans to the quicker side of the spectrum while sounding more than sufficient on most tracks, in a very good way. This is not a “basshead set” like what Legato is, but the overall character of the bass of the Duo will be sufficient on tracks, regardless of any genre.
Mids:
  • Just like what the Harman Target aims, the mids here in this IEM are mildly recessed, but are open, clear and detailed. It will sound “thin” at times depending on the track. Lower mids are quite transparent in terms of thickness and texture with a slight midbass bleed enough to keep things slightly warm. Upper mids are definitely elevated, airy, sparkly, and clear. There are instances that peaks are apparent on sibilant prone tracks on this set. It is nowhere near fatiguing or annoying, but I do see those people with very sensitive ears might have a problem with the Duo.
Highs:
  • The Duo exhibits a not-overly-bright, clear, and decently- extended treble without any signs of peaks, pierce, and harshness. Detail retrieval is above average as microdetails can be easily picked up, along with the macrodetails.
Soundstage, Imaging, and separation:
  • The technical performance on this IEM is average to above average in my opinion. It isn’t the widest sounding IEM, but it never sounded cramped. It is wider than deep, with a good amount of height, width, and depth. Separation and layering are above average and will handle very busy passages easily. Imaging is precise, making it very suitable for live recordings and playing competitive games.
================================================================================================================
Other IEM comparisons!

VS Truthear Zero (Blue)
  • The Zero has more bass quantity when compared, but is quite slow in terms of attack and decay. Its mids exhibit less warmth and texture when compared, with some instances of shout on its upper mids. Treble is a bit more extended on the Blue, but is quite unrefined to my ears. As for the technicalities, the Zero is a bit wider, while the Duo excels on the imaging and separation when compared.
VS Kiwi Ears Cadenza
  • The Cadenza is miles better on the tonality due to its rich, lush, more cohesive, thick character It is also less extended on the treble area. It loses on the technical performance compared to the Duo though, except for its soundstage.
VS Simgot EW200
  • The Simgot EW200 is definitely miles better in terms of overall sound. It is airier, cleaner and more precise in terms of sound compared to the Duo, but the Duo does not fall short in terms of its price to performance ratio.
================================================================================================================
Pros:
  • A well-tuned, Harman-sounding IEM.
  • Balances both technical and tonal performance quite well for its price.
  • Fun, all-rounder sound.
  • Clean, thick lows.
  • Clear, open mids.
  • Decently extended, sparkly treble.
  • Average-above average technical performance.
  • Excellent fit, comfort, and isolation.
  • Very good build quality.
  • Easy to drive.
Cons:
  • Slight peaks are present on the upper mids on sibilant prone tracks.
  • Minimal accessories for its asking price.
  • Mids may sound thin at times.

================================================================================================================
Verdict

The CCA Duo is a very recommendable set to everyone due to its all-rounder, fun sound while keeping the tonal and technical performance balanced in terms of quality. Despite exhibiting the same sound profile like most IEMs exist in today’s Chi-Fi market, CCA showed that they tuned the Duo well, making it to my top recommendations under 50USD. Well-done!

Pairing recommendation/s:
  • Source: This sounds just fine when plugged straight to a phone, but is vastly better when used with a proper source. I suggest using a neutral sounding DAC for this one to trim down some warmth.
  • Eartips: The eartips are alright and enough for the most part. You may always use your preferred eartips.
  • Cable gets the job done and is sufficient for the most part. You may always use your preferred cable.
Thank you for reading!

Non-affiliated product link here!: https://www.kztws.com/en-ca/collections/all-products/products/cca-duo

Additional Photos Here:
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Zerstorer_GOhren

500+ Head-Fier
CCA DUO: Dynamic Duo Pleasure
Pros: △ Shell chassis are well-built and quite a looker too for its price.
△ Unanticipated performance of its dual micro dynamic drivers.
△ Memory foam ear tips as its stock ear tips?....probably.
△ Tight to punchy bass response to give that sense of cleanliness across the frequency range spectrum.
△ Neutral, transparent and bright midrange.
△ Quite good on rendering female vocals to have an energetic and silvery tone.
△ Sufficiently bright and detailed treble response.
△ Remarkably, it has an ample air for a micro-dynamic driver.
△ It has a respectable separation and layering performance for this type of driver configuration.
△ Good resolution capabilities for a dual dynamic driver set.
Cons: ▽ It appears that it is sort of lacking of impact and authority on its bass response. (Sorry, bassheads… definitely not for you)
▽ Stock cable, It is quite outdated that there are some entry-level have already better stock cables.
▽ Few male vocals sound a tad leaner particularly on baritone singers.
▽ Quite an ear tip dependent, put up a stock silicone ear tip on this one, you will hear it what I mean.
▽ A cautious reminder for treble-sensitives folk out there who aren't comfortable to memory foam ear tips, you need to find a better ear tips that suits for you.
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Dynamic drivers are a type of transducers that are quite common as they are easily available in the supply. Its function was to simply convert the electrical signals into sound waves via voice coils that are suspended between the points of a magnet then react to the diaphragm to disperse the air pressure. It is given that it produces a deeper bass response but will not give you the best full range sound that a dual and hybrid can achieve.


Oi! mates and fellow audio enthusiasts out there, It's been awhile since I did a review on a CCA (Clear Concept Audio) product. So finally, I got one and this time it's their latest offering on the entry-level segment.


Well, I'll be straight on this one. One of the reps of CCA/KZ actually asked me if I'm still available to do a product review on their latest offering. To be honest, I'm quite sceptical on the performance of most dual dynamic drivers IEM in both tonal and technical aspects given that I did some reviews of these IEMs with similar driver set-up and mostly, I find it insufficient and quite unimpressed due to inadequacies of their technical performance. But due to my curious nature, I'll give it a chance.

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This is CCA DUO, this is CCA's first attempt at implementing dual dynamic drivers on their products. Dual dynamic drivers became a norm and popular set-up in under £78/US$100 as dynamic drivers are easily available in the supply market and easy to manufacture too. CCA DUO employs a two new generation of micro dynamic drivers (probably modified XUN ones), they both have a 7mm in dual-clambered structure. The said set-up will give a richer, more dynamic and even a noticeable improvement of its resolution proficiency. It appears that these drivers are also connected with acoustic tubes to provide seamless sound waves towards the end of a nozzle.

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These drivers are encapsulated in a shell chassis made of composite materials. The faceplates are made of aluminium alloy with a sort of misshapen sleek curve pattern which give a futuristic look and its cavity base is made of high quality acrylic resin moulded via 3D-printing process. Like all CCA products, it still uses a QDC-type of 2-pin connector as its detachable mechanism. It is also noted that it uses memory foam ear tips as its stock ear tips set-up.

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Regarding its fitting and comfort, CCA DUO did a good job on designing its overall shell outline as its contours fit well into my lugholes without any discomfort or wear fatigue. It gives me a decent noise isolation as it is able to block some external noises coming from the outside surroundings. But here are some of my advice, try to find a better ear tips, if you are not comfortable memory foam ear tips and using its stock silicone ear tips wont deliver the same sonic performance as they sound a bit unrefined, that's why look for proper ear tips that simulates the sound quality from its stock memory foam ear tips set-up.

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Like all CCA and KZ products, when it comes to product packaging, CCA DUO's product box are rather bare bones and economical as they try to reduce its price as much as possible to be reasonably cheap to purchase.

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Here are following contents inside of its packaging box:

■ a pair of CCA DUO.

■ a 2-core SPC in 3.5mm SE termination plug stock cable.

■ a pair of memory foam ear tips.

■ Three(3) pairs of black coloured narrow bore ear tips in different standard sizes.

■ Instruction manual.

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CCA DUO is definitely easy to drive as it only needs a decent amount of power output from its sources. It can be amplified from devices like smartphones and tablets with some decent volume level and it can deliver a very dynamic and full range sound that we expect for.

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As for its tonality, CCA DUO has this mild-U shaped sound profile which is leaning towards more of a bright tuning. It has some noticeable emphasis on lows, a neutral and linear midrange and an elevated high frequency. It seems that CCA properly optimised the dual dynamic driver set-up for specific frequency ranges.

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LOWS/BASS

Even the bass frequency sounds elevated, it doesn't qualify to be a basshead's bass quantity that might perceive them as too lean sounding but it has some quality that will suit its tuning orientation. It has a tight to punchy, precise and clean bass response that some other dual dynamic drivers are hardly able to achieve . I felt those grumbling and reverberations from sub-bass focus instruments like low-toned bass guitars, octabasses and synthesisers.

Midbass has an ample texture on its note weight to have a more balanced sound on bass guitars, bass kick drums and bass-baritone vocals. Bass guitars have that rasping and resonant sound to give that particular roar while bass kick drums also have that resonant sound but with a thudding sound too as I clearly hear those fast double bass pedals from extreme metal tracks. On bass-baritone vocals, it has a sufficient deep and texture to give dark and ample density on its tone.



MIDRANGE:

For dual dynamic driver set-up, it is probably the one of cleanest midrange presentations that I heard in this particular driver configuration so far. It sounds transparent, neutral, bright and brimming with energy that it will benefit more on female vocals, woodwinds and even string instruments while male vocals and brass instruments will sound a tad less engaging and less telling in my opinion.

Baritones and contraltos seems to have a sufficient lushness, smooth intonation and decent rich tone from them but they have less darker pitch. Tenors have a reasonable brassiness and spiciness sound from them as I listen on either modern pop and rock or classical operatic artists. Mezzo-sopranos and countertenors have an agile, coppery and tender sound as I listen to Cecilia Bartoli, Andrea Corr and Stevie Nicks (Fleetwood Mac era). Last but not least, soprano vocals, this type of voice will sounds better on the DUO whether it's a dramatic type, soubrette, lyric and even coloratura ones that this set will execute almost flawlessly. Its tone really captivates me as they have a gleaming and silvery sound that a soprano vocal qualities should possess.

As for instruments, when it comes to strings, it gives more crisp, bright and lingering tone on guitars then a vibrant and sustaining sound on the violins. Woodwinds like concert flutes have a bright and penetrating tone while picollos have intense and bright sound then on saxophones and clarinets, they have a reedy, incisive and menacing sound from them. Brass like trumpets and horns have brilliant and vivid sound while trombones have less warm and tad soft sounding in my preference. Percussives like toms and field drums have hard and sonorous sound while snares have sharp and bright tone.Timpanis have that dry sounding and marimbas have these hollow and resonant sound. Pianos seems to have brighter tone as they sound crisp and brilliant but there are some instances of being tinny sound (depends on ear tips you used especially on silicone ear tips).



HIGHS/TREBLE:

As I mentioned before that the treble response of DUO is somehow depends on what particular ear tips we are using. Memory foam ear tips gives a tad smoother and less offensive treble quality but on the stock silicone ear tips, it gives a tad brighter and shrilly response but it has better airy extension. Upper mids appears to have some boosts as it gives a definition on vocals and percussive and rhythmic instrument attacks while it has a good clarity (for a micro dynamic driver) on the presence part of the treble region. It is also noted that on stock silicone ear tips, it has some occassional sibilance and a tad sharpness but on other ear tips from third party like TANGZU SanCai it lessened it to the point I consider it as well-controlled.

The cymbals sounds crisp, brilliant with good amount of sizzle while the hi-hats have that shortened buzzing sound to give that distinctive chick sound. Then on glockenspiels, it has brilliant, metallic and striking tone from them. For a dual dynamic driver set, it has a good amount air and remakable sparkle that a new generation of micro dynamic driver was able to deliver it impressively give the supposedly limitations of these type of drivers.



SOUNDSTAGE, IMAGING AND OTHER TECHNICALITIES:

Based on my observation on how I perceived its sound/speaker dimensions of CCA DUO, they have a rather moderate size within my head room as it has fairly average width span but it was a good height reach and excellent depth.

As for imaging, it seems to have a typical two-channel stereo presentation where I was able to position of instruments and vocals within its stereo spatial field with good coherency to point it out. It also has good separation and layering as it has a good spacing between each instruments and vocals while its tonal and frequency layers are decently arranged and properly stack on its sonic canvas that really impressed me that these dual or triple dynamic driver set-up that really surprises me so far. It can manage to handle some complex tracks like Jazz ensemble and multi-instrumental musical movie scores but on a full symphonic orchestras, it really shows the limitation of drivers on handling these tracks but for now only few sets like this set can decently do a playback on it.

The cohesive performance of both dual driver are quite capable to deliver a faster transient response while it able to project a clarity and detail from it. It has a capable resolution capabilities as it has a solid and well-defined macro-dynamics as it able to execute a good notation attacks while it has a excellent detail retrieval (for a micro dynamic driver) as it able to retrieve some nuances and note subtleties from audio tracks.



PEER COMPARISONS:


QKZ X HBB KHAN


● A clash between competitors, KHAN's
other dynamic driver has larger size as it uses a 10mm in tandem with other 7mm dynamic driver. Like the DUO it also has composite materials of its shell chassis but its overall design aesthetics are unoriginal as I saw it to other sets with almost identical form factor. As for product packaging, KHAN fares better as it has more inclusions and better product presentation although it is bit pricey.

● Compare to DUO, KHAN's tuning has a more coloured tonality as it has more V-shape sound and more warmer sounding compare to the DUO. It has a more boomy and authoritative bass response albeit it has has a sullied midrange and less bright and more relaxed treble to its sounds a tad veiled and low resolution sounding in my opinion. There's nothing to say about its technical capabilities as it was too average and nothing to stand out on it as they are incomparable with DUO.



TRIPOWIN KAILUA

● Another dual dynamic driver configuration set that will be compared to the DUO. While it has larger 10mm but it is tandem with smaller supporting 6mm driver. Unlike the DUO, its shell chassis are made of solid aluminum alloy but the fitting and comfort is rather challenging but the TFZ/NX7 type connector is more solid and sturdy than QDC-style connector. Product packaging of this set is pretty basic but at least it has an included IEM storage bag.

● Regarding its tonality, KAILUA has a warmer, v-shaped sound signature that makes it more coloured sounding compared to the almost neutral sounding DUO. It has more dominant bass, warmer vocals which are quite good for male vocals and some female vocals too like contralto and dramatic mezzo-sopranos. It has a more smoother and relaxed treble response but it has a rather meagre sparkle and airy extension. As for technicalities, it is quite inferior compared to the DUO in almost all aspect from sound/speaker stage up to the resolution capability.


As I end my review on CCA DUO, this is actually a very surprising moment given my qualms and uncertainties on IEMs with dual dynamic driver configuration. CCA DUO somehow proves me wrong that a properly implemented dual driver configuration will show its true potential and on how it will render the best effective method to deliver such fine sound quality.


CCA DUO will probably became my standard reference on the entry-level dual dynamic driver IEMs for incoming products with similar driver configuration. And if you want an almost neutral sounding set that sounds clean, detail and emanates clarity on resolution in under £28/US$35, then this is definitely a good recommendation.


CCA DUO is now available at KZ Official Store, it also available at LINSOUL too. Check out the provided unaffiliated links down below.


★★CCA DUO - OFFICIAL★★

★★CCA DUO - LINSOUL★★



Also checkout my reviews on other CCA products:


◆ CCA CRA

◆ CCA CA16 PRO

◆ CCA LYRA

◆ CCA CA10


◆ CCA HM20

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SPECIFICATION:

MODEL: CCA DUO
IMPEDANCE: 18Ω
SENSITIVITY: 106dB
FREQUENCY RESPONSE: 20Hz – 40KHz
CABLE LENGTH: 1.2M
PIN TYPE: QDC-TYPE 2-PIN CONNECTOR (0.75MM)
PLUG TYPE: 3.5mm
DRIVER UNIT(S): (2) DYNAMIC DRIVER



Some Tracks Tested: ( * = 16-bit FLAC, ** = 24-bit FLAC, *'* = MQA, '*' = DSD, *'= .WAV)


Alison Krauss -When You Say Nothing At All *
Jade Wiedlin - Blue Kiss**
Led Zeppelin - When The Levee Breaks **
Mountain - Mississippi Queen *
Queen - Killer Queen **
Guns N' Roses - Patience *'*
Eric Clapton - Tears in Heaven '*'
Sergio Mendes- Never Gonna Let You Go '*'
Pearl Jam - Daughter **
Roselia - Hidamari Rhodonite *
Assassin - Fight (To Stop The Tyranny)*
Celtic Frost- Visual Aggression *
New Order - Blue Monday *
The Corrs- What Can I do (unplugged version) *
Jimi Hendrix Experience - Voodoo Child *
The Madness- Buggy Trousers *
Metallica - Motorbreath **
Mariah Carey- Always Be My Baby *
Destiny's Child - Say My Name *
Malice Mizer- Au Revoir *
Mozart - Lacrimosa *
New York Philharmonic Orchestra - Dvorak- Symphony 9 " From the New World." *
Eva Cassidy - Fields of Gold (Sting cover)*
Michael Jackson - Give In To Me *
Exciter - Violence and Force *
Diana Krall - Stop This World **
Debbie Gibson - Foolish Beat *'*
The Sisters of Mercy – Lucretia My Reflection**
Suzanne Vega – Luka **
Lauren Christy – Steep *
Ottoman Mehter - Hucum Marsi *
Diana Damrau - Mozart: Die Zauberflöte*
Type O Negative - Black No.1 *
Felix Ayo - Vivaldi: Presto **
Three Tenors - Nessum Dorma *
Mercyful Fate - Witches' Dance *

P.S.

I am not affiliated to CCA nor receive monetary incentives and financial gains as they provide me a review unit for an exchange of factual and sincere feedback from yours truly.

Once again, I would like to send my gratitude to TYVAN LAM of KZ/CCA for providing this review unit. I truly appreciate his generosity and trust towards me and other reviewers.


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Ceeluh7

500+ Head-Fier
CCA Duo Review
Pros: Price per the performance
Bass has quality over quantity
Forward vocals from mid-centric tuning
Snappy treble which stays mostly non-offensive
Very detailed sound
Imaging & Separation
Responds well to EQ (Few db’s in the low-end works wonders)
Cons: Same KZ cable
Sparse accessories
Bass lean and without authoritative slam
Thin note weight in the midrange
May be too bright for some
CCA Duo Review
Duo


Duo

CCA Duo

Intro

Hello, here we are, yet again with another KZ/CCA iem. The set I’m reviewing today ushers in a kind of “resurgence” from the sister company to KZCCA. And the set I am referring to is none other than the “CCA Duo”.

The Duo is actually a Dual-Dynamic Driver set that sparked some Interest in the community as the budget arena is always a hot item. Let alone a Dual-DD offering. However, this set is not an “ultra-budget” set like we’ve seen recently. Costing roughly $29 depending on where you choose to purchase the Duo, (if you decide to purchase the Duo) and it fights for relevance against quite a few iems ranging from $25 to $35. I would even say that the Duo fights for relevancy against some sets from the same company (KZ/CCA) but… I’ll let you decide and hash that out though. For now, I’ll stick with trying to figure out this latest creation from the famous iem maker and try to answer if it’s worth the price, how it stacks up against other Dual-DD sets and in general… does the Duo sound good or not?

Trending up

I have reviewed many KZ/CCA iems and I’ll be honest, I haven’t seen even one… flat-out dud. All of them are good in their own right and for their respective tunings and respective price points. Each set usually offers a very good price to performance and each set is usually one of the better built sets in their relative price points.
KZ has really upped their game over the past couple years and so long as you aren’t a KZ “hater” then you’d likely be able to agree that the tuning has gotten much better. Lately we’ve seen some real nice sets like the KZ Krila (Krila Review), KZ D-Fi (D-Fi Review), KZ ZVX (ZVX Review), the illustrious collab with HBB in the KZ PR2 (PR2 Review), to the more expensive KZ AS24 (AS24 Review). Each has made an impact, and each is a good set in their own right. There are about ten other sets over the course of the past couple years that have been nice as well and can be found at Mobileaudiophile.com if curious.
At any rate, I was happy to receive this set from KZ/CCA and I want to thank Tyvan Lam and KZ for providing the Duo for an honest and fair impression of what I hear. It will always be my motivation to explain my exact thoughts and nothing more and I do hope it helps those who chose to read this review. So, without further ado… The CCA Duo…

Purchasing links

Amazon
Kztws.com
Linsoul
Duo Gear
CCA Duo paired with the Shanling M6 Ultra

Duo Gear
Gear: Fiio UTWS5 / Ifi Go Blu / Shanling M6 Ultra / iBasso DX240 / Hidizs S9 Pro / Moondrop Dawn 4.4

Gear used for testing

Fiio UTWS5
Ifi Go Blu
Moondrop Dawn 4.4
Hidizs S9 Pro
iBasso DX240 with Amp8 MK2
Shanling M6 Ultra

Duo
The CCA Duo attached to the TRN Modular cable


Packaging & Accessories


This section is always very short in a KZ/CCA review. There’s not a whole lot to report as the small box is very plain, just a picture of the Duo on the box and some specs on the back. Inside the box you’ll find the tips and the cable and that’s about it. Nothing crazy. Of course, I don’t think anyone should expect anything more either.

Duo packaging
Duo packaging
Duo packaging



Cable

Duo cable

Another very short section as the cable provided is the same KZ cable that has been involved with every iem that I’ve gotten for about two years now from KZ. Same 3.5 single ended, QDC style 2-Pin white/opaque SPC cable. Not complaining though as I do believe that KZ puts more effort and money into the creation of the earphones themselves rather than accessories. So, as I do, I swapped out the cable right away for the TRN Modular cable which came with the TRN Rosefinch. Please note that there is nothing wrong about the included cable as far as sound quality is concerned and if upgrading your cable simply isn’t an option then you’ll be fine using the KZ cable.

Eartips

Duo Eartips

Included in the packaging is one of my favorite types of tips which really come in handy for a multitude of different earphones and those are the KZ Starline tips. KZ added three pairs in total (S, M, L) as well as one pair of medium sized foam tips. One thing I enjoy about Starline tips is their rigidity and ability to seal in my ears. However, I don’t think that the Starlines match the Duo… At all. For one, the Starlines tend to increase the upper frequencies as well as the upper midrange a bit on the Duo even more than I’d like as the Duo is already a brighter sounding set. Starlines also help with sets that have a narrower stage and this does help but I simply needed something different. I actually went with my tried-and-true KBear 07 tips which added more texture and punch to the low end and increased the stage a bit with a nice vocal presence. Still, please KZ, keep including Starlines, I can never have enough of them.



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Build / Design / Internals / Fit / Drivability

Build Quality

In terms of build quality, the Duo is certainly in the upper echelon of iems in its price range. CCA used 3D printing from their own & manufacturing facility & warehouses. The Shells are made of a 3D printed resin material. They don’t feel like any cheap plastic but more like a durable and more hard resin. The resin used is clear so peering in through the Shells it is easy to get a look at the drivers themselves. Also, easy to see is that CCA went with sound tubes to better delineate the frequencies as I can see them running to the nozzles from the drivers. The faceplates are made of a metal alloy with a gun-metal appearance. All in all, the build quality is very nice for a $40 iem. Not the best but very nice and solid and durable feeling in hand. Another thing is that the Duo are really featherlight in the ears which is a huge benefit for long listening sessions. The Duo was created to sit at roughly a 45-degree angle on the ear which I’m assuming will snuggly fit in most ears.

Duo Build
Duo Build
Duo Build
Duo Build

Design

The Duo is a very simple looking iem, nothing flashy, or too trendy, not steam punk, and not outright youthful, like many sets in the budget space. Even by KZ standards the Duo is more mature looking. The faceplates themselves have a very slick and sleek aesthetic but also a utilitarian vibe. The Duo has a classier pattern which consists of one simple wavy line and the name “CCA Duo” imposed on them. Not flashy, they’re classy!

Anyways, the design is pretty cool. For one I dig the Alloy faceplate and I also dig the Amber colored transparent resin shell cavity which shows off a good look at the drivers. Friends, I honestly think this is one of the more attractive iems that KZ/CCA have made. It’s simple, nothing extravagant or chic, nothing boujee and nothing only meant for teenagers. Instead, I feel the Duo look like a slick and aerodynamic professional looking iem that can be worn anywhere without any strange looks. I think it’s a job well done. My opinion.

Internals

Inside of the Duo CCA chose to go with two 7mm Dynamic Drivers and each owning a dual magnet array as well as dual cavities per each driver which are said to have a very high magnetic flux compared to similarly priced iems. Of course, this is not all that rare, but it is cool to see KZ/CCA following some of the latest Dual-DD trends and coming up with a set of their own to try to compete. We have seen other sets go with two Dynamic Drivers in the recent past and so it will be interesting to compare. However, I think I would’ve liked to see the Woofer around 10mm, just for more air movement and surface area. Not to say that 7mm can’t sound fully expressive and dynamic because they certainly can. Truthfully, for a 7mm Driver, CCA did a nice job.

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Fit

As far as fit goes I had to definitely find the right eartips. With the included tips I did have to fiddle around a bit for a good seal. Using the KBear 07 large sized tips helped much more in my ears. I will say that once a seal is established the fit is amazing. The Duo is a set that I can very easily wear for hours at a time and never even think about it. I do think the 45-degree angle helps to sit more. Perfectly for my ear anatomy. I have zero idea how these will fit you so take this with a grain of salt. Now, I found isolation to be better than average. For whatever reason I get better attenuation of outside noises using the Duo than many other sets. Also, sound leakage is not a problem.

Drivability

The CCA Duo is rated at 18-ohms and a sensitivity of 106-db’s, so it really isn’t super difficult to drive. I think a smartphone can probably do the trick, but I also think that it won’t maximize the potential of the Duo either. I don’t feel that the Duo is as sensitive as others in the price point and around the same supposed sensitivity. Not that they are difficult either, but I found I had to turn the volume up a bit more than something like the Truthear Zero for instance.

Mobile listening

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However, even using something like the Fiio UTWS5 I had plenty of headroom and dynamics and the warmer sound of the UTWS5 really did well to offset the Duo. Bumping up to the IFi Go Blu (CS43131 dac chip) I found the slight warmth and note weight of the Go Blu played well with the tonality of the Duo which is pretty bright. These two made synergy together. The Moondrop Dawn 4.4 (CS43131 dac chip) is a powerful little Dongle Dac, and I found that the Duo certainly responded with the additional power by improving staging, separation as well as additional bass density. The Hidizs S9 Pro (ES9038 Q2M dac chip) was much the same as the Dawn and both are very powerful Dongle Dacs. I do think the Dawn was a bit more expressive and cleaner with the Duo, but I really enjoy both units.

DAPs

Moving up to the iBasso DX240 (ES9038 Pro dac chip) and using the iBasso Amp8 MK2 I found that the sound didn’t show as much improvement. The DX240 is more analytical and slightly closer to neutral which emphasized the Duo’s timbre to come across slightly less natural to me. However, using the Shanling M6 Ultra (AK4493SEQ dac chip) I had a complete opposite experience as the M6 Ultra is more velvet in its tonality, it’s more resolving and thickens up the Duo’s midrange and treble while adding a bit more bass extension and slam. I’d say that source pairing is pretty important with the Duo as it’s tuning & coloration tilted to one side of the scale, and you should consider a source which counteracts the natural sound of the Duo. Still, as far as power is concerned; all you need is a decent Dongle Dac.

Duo
The CCA Duo has very nice synergy with the Fiio UTWS5

Sound Impressions

The first thing I thought when putting the CCA Duo into my ears was… “Wow this sound is very clean”, which was quickly followed by “Wow these are also pretty bright!”. I was not immediately impressed. I have to be honest. The Duo took me a minute to adjust. The same thing occurred with the Truthear Zero (in other ways), and also, no I am not simply drawing this distinction due to the same driver configuration.

Redemption

Anyways, I didn’t like them very much upon first listen. The sound was different. However, over the course of about 10 songs my opinion magically morphed into reserved delight. Just like the Zero. I slowly “got it”. The sound is so very uplifted, intense in a way. The sound is bright and detailed for a Dual-DD iem. I hear a set that isn’t quite neutral but actually teeters on being neutral/bright. Brightish if you will. However, somehow, I don’t find them fatiguing or too much. So, to answer my own question if they were missing something or if they had too much of something I would say to myself… “Nope the Duo are simply different”.

Burn-in / Listen-in

I gave the Duo around 70 hours of burn in, and I do think it helps quite a bit. There were some timbre issues at first that gifted my listening ears with almost a metallic timbre. A buzz at note ends or a tizzy type of note outline that seemed more prominent as I turned the volume up. After burn-in I didn’t get this anymore. So, just do yourself a favor and give ’em some burn-in or listen-in or just refrain from judging them too harshly until they’ve had at least 50 hours of play time. Dynamic Drivers generally need more play time depending on the material of Drivers and I certainly think the Duo is under that umbrella.

How does it sound?

Back to the sound. After burn-in, eartip changes, cable swap and some good ‘ole fashioned “brain burn” I have to say… This is a nice set my friends. I hear something closer to a U-shaped or W-shaped sound that has a huge amount of lean dynamism. Note weight is not heavy but somehow there is still a very nice presence and structure to the sound with an energetic foundation. If you are coming from a warmer and lusher iem than the Duo may shock your senses to a degree.

The sound is very clean and highly resolute for a $29 set. The bass is slightly lean for some, I’m sure. The Duo is sub-bass focused, punchy and very tight. Despite that, the Duo is most certainly not for bass Bois. The bass is lean and could use some EQ down low… if you need more of course. The midrange is forward, fast and articulate with a penchant for female vocals. The mids are definitely the shining star of the Duo, in my humble opinion. The treble has nice emphasis that is non-offensive and has some treble punch and brilliance to it without coming across tizzy, splashy or metallic. The sound is mostly detail oriented with a nice openness. The stage is above average with good macro dynamics. If this is as far as you read, just know, the CCA Duo gives a very nice presentation of my music and will serve as a nice compliment to some warmer and more bass heavy iems in the price point.

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Graph courtesy of Ian Fann, thank you very much!

Bass Region

Sub-bass

Like I’ve already clearly stated the bass is not the most fun & boosted of all three frequency divisions. Does this make it bad? Absolutely not. The low-end has plenty of thump for most any track but simply comes across leaner than many sets. There is moderate rumble like on the track “Groove” by Ray Wylie Hubbard. Usually, I’ll get a low and droning reverb that sets the tone for the track. On the Duo I get that low drone but it’s simply less authoritative. I like the clean vocals which run parallel with the bassline, and I do like the extension down low. Killer Mike has a track “Down By Law” on his brand-new album and usually this song comes across with a bit more of a haptic sensation. I actually hear nice low-end extension on this track.

Mid-bass

The mid-bass is also slightly held back with moderate slam. That said, I like the speedy nature of the bass. It’s pretty well defined with a perceivably more rapid boom. Transient attack & decay seems to resolve quicker as the bass handles complex bass tracks great for a $29 iem. “Edge Of The Ocean” by Stick Figure sounds fantastic on the Duo. There is a ton of instrumental harmony floating throughout the melody of this track in tropical waves and the Duo represents each individual peice in that melody. All the while the bass is not lost and comes through relatively strong. I suppose this is the beauty of this tuning, the Duo is capable of taking on some complex musical arrangements without drowning them out in bass veil. I guess this is where I should also add that the bass does not muddy up the midrange. It’s strategically rolled-off purposefully to keep the overall balance of the sound clean and carefree.

Bass as a whole & some discrepancies

In truth, I much more gravitate towards an authoritative low-end which helps to add depth. More low-end emphasis rounds out the mix by helping give vocals and instruments some weight and body to them. A more robust low-end helps with the timbre as well. Having more bass is also more exciting and fun to me. The Duo almost gets there. However, I find the Duo makes up for it with something more like “lean muscle mass” and a closer to “pristine” take on my music. Also, the bass is plenty enough for me in most tracks. Maybe this is partially caused by the use of 7mm Drivers handling the Woofer section but I’m not complaining, it still sounds good.

Listening with the Duo, the bass guitar usually doesn’t have the same robust growl. On the other hand, kick drums have that hollow boom with some tackiness at the leading edge in attack. The downside of this bass is that it is not for bassheads at all and that it doesn’t offset the brightness as well as I’d like. I can’t help but be impressed with the agility of the Duo’s bass region though. It’s speedy & macro-detailed, it’s not one noted and it’s dynamic. Even if it’s less in quantity. However, if you must, try to EQ a few Db’s into the low-end around 60 to 100hz, somewhere in there if you need more. It really does help and turns this set into a real challenger in the price point and not just a great niche type replay. Still, all things considered, the bass as it is in its stock form is mature and clean and I’m sure many will enjoy it.

Duo

Midrange

In my humble opinion I believe the midrange steals the show, so to speak. Definitely not recessed but also not so forward that anything is in my face or unnatural in its forwardness. I find the midrange fits. This doesn’t mean it doesn’t come with some subjective quarks and qualms…

First off, the note weight on male vocals is skewed towards unnaturally thin though not overtly thin or papery or dry. Vocals still have a moist edge to them. Despite that, I could still use a touch of weight and a pinch more warmth. However, I’m not you and I’m sure many will love the Duo’s rendition of a male vocal. Over time and listening, I began to really dig the sound of a male vocal on this set. Nothing jumps out as “off” per se. Slightly thin, maybe a bit crisp at note edges but males have good presence in the mix. “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” by Home Free (U2 Cover) shows off every pitch and cadence of a male voice and I gotta say, the Duo handles this specific track lovely. Then again, pick any song off that album and you’ll hear the same result.

Upper-Midrange

The upper midrange has a real draw to it for me. Forward in the mix but also transparent and revealing. There is this shimmery type of smoothness that gives female voices this soft and subtle lift. Now, just like the lower-mids, the upper-mids also aren’t the most robust in body, but they aren’t lacking either. In “Whispering Waltz” by Sierra Ferrell, her voice is naturally sweet and feathery, but I can’t help but notice the Duo aligns with the inflection and cadence of her voice very well. The Duo does well with nuanced and lovely little articulations or modulations in a female's vocal delivery. I really enjoy the way CCA tuned this area of the mix. Pick any Ingrid Andress track, like “More Hearts Than Mine“. Her voice has this sweet edginess or tuneful rawness, almost like a rasp but stays smooth and mellifluent. The Duo displays this perfectly without turning that rasp into something processed, metallic, or tizzy sounding.

Instruments

The midrange also creates some space between instruments and voices in a nice manner for a $29 set. It helps that the attack-through-sustain is actually a tighter transition and cleaner than you’d probably think too. Despite the brightness on the Duo, everything is still very well balanced which also helps in the Duo’s ability to separate elements of a stage and create a more authentic field of sound. Timbre is not perfect, but the structure of the sound is nice for instruments. Cymbal’s strike with some pep, in fact percussion in general has a strong pang to my ears. Piano could use more fullness and stuff like violin sounds nice…

Downsides of the midrange

The potential issues within the midrange are all centered around the note weight and timbre. Like I said, if you are coming from some warmer and lusher iems and greatly enjoy that type of sound then the Duo may not be for you. Timbre isn’t perfect as everything comes off a bit bright and simply not as full sounding as some iems. I don’t think this is a real issue, but it may turn some people off. On the flipside, the Duo isn’t shouty either, believe it or not. At least not to me. Also, I don’t hear any sibilance. The midrange is also more detailed than I would’ve thought. Certainly, more so than other Double-DD iems we’ve seen of late. In fact, the Duo almost comes across like an all-BA set in many regards to my ears. The Duo has the snappy behavior of a BA set yet without the BA timbre.

Duo
The CCA Duo sounds fantastic attached to the Ifi Go Blu

Treble Region

The treble region has some brilliance to it. It has pizzazz up top. Not brilliant in the sense that they come across shrill, but brilliant as in; bright enough to lift the entire mix. There is a coldness and emphasis up top which cascades all the way down to the bass region. The treble quite literally jazzes up everything. There’s some decent extension up top as well. For example, the secondary harmonics of a cymbal strike don’t come across attenuated but also, they don’t come across too splashy either with good note definition & character extended way out. Trumpets in this region have a nice brassy type of fullness. Perhaps a bit too bright and thin but not bad at all. Violin sounds nice to my ears. In truth, I think all instruments will be colored towards the uplifted and sparkler side of things. So, expect that.

Now, for the most part, I don’t find the treble shouty or sibilant. I feel the treble stays right below the line of discomfort. Again, for my tastes. After burn-in I do believe the treble flattened out a bit, calmed down some, and gained some control and gained some ductility that it didn’t have before. This is not an ultra-crispy treble but instead it’s slightly punchy, perhaps a bit tinsley, it is on the thin side too, but it’s still snappy with some nice smoothness. There’s nothing jagged or coarse, nothing grainy and again, I don’t hear any sibilance.

Not “completely” safe

To be honest I think CCA really did well in this region being that they were trying to tune Dynamic Drivers which don’t always impress a whole lot in the higher frequencies. I think that CCA did the best they could in creating a brighter treble region which still holds on to some semblance of timbre integrity, has nice micro-details and nuances and doesn’t scare me off with ear piercing sheen. One thing is for sure… This treble is not considered completely safe.

Examples

Micro-details are certainly in abundance in the treble region as in a track by Billy Strings… Ice Bridges“. His rapid-fire banjo play proves the Duo can keep up with fast and nuanced tracks in the treble region by delineating each string pull and keeping the rest of the musical arrangement in check. Another track which impresses is “Bishop School” by Yusef Lateef. This song is littered with different types of treble activity. Granted, any recording I’ve heard of this song isn’t that great, but the Duo is able to capture all of the finer details while doing a decent job of highlighting each instrument well.

Downsides to the Treble Region

Now please don’t confuse, the Duo is not going to blow anyone’s mind in its ability to recreate a natural and speedy treble region. It’s still pretty bright. I’m simply giving credit where credit is probably due. There are certainly issues. First, it may be too bright for some, too sparkly and too shimmery. There’s a coldness to the sound that not everyone will jive with. It took me many hours of burn-in coupled with brain burn to really begin to love the sound. So, I do think it is acquired taste. I think real treble Heads will probably be happy with this set.

Duo

Technicalities

Soundstage

I find the soundstage is neither small nor overtly large. I think it’s an average sized stage with good width, a pretty full height and about average depth. The Duo is not simply a wall of sound and does not sound flat to me. There is depth there which aids in layering and adding distinction between instruments and voices. Overall, the stage size is about average and for all I tents and purposes, for $29…that’s a good thing.

Separation / Imaging

I think the Duo does begin to excel a bit in these two parameters, meaning separation and imaging. I have zero problems imagining distinct instruments for most any track besides bad recordings and tracks that are simply congested no matter what iem is playing it. For the most part I feel the Duo does very well at separating elements on a stage which is a nice attribute at this price. Also, imaging is very easy to imagine in this psycho-acoustic world. Left to right is as it should be and there is some depth of field to render front to back instruments and voices. The Duo has good control overall which certainly helps it to cast all pieces of a musical arrangement in correct places making them fairly easy to distinguish.

Details

I think you already know what I’m going to say here. The Duo does very well at illuminating the finer details in my music. It has a recipe for success to be honest. The stage is decently sized, the tuning is overall more lifted and airier, separation is very nice and note definition is good too. We don’t have any masking from the bass or too much coloration either which helps to bring the minutia to the surface. Be it a fast track or a solo acoustic track the Duo will perform pretty well in the detail department.



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Left to right: Truthear X-Crinacle Zero / TRN MT4 / QKZ X-HBB Khan

Comparisons

Note: I just want to let you all know that each comparison will be against the other sets of varying prices which each have the same driver configuration. KZ had asked me to do so, and I am gladly obliging that recommendation. The only set I left out (that I have to compare) is the Tripowin Kailua as I am in the middle of completing a review of that set and wanted to save some info for that review. Plus, the Kailua is a beast, and the price difference is warranted. These comparisons are not a duel to the death. I really don’t think crowning one set above another is very helpful as these are my subjective thoughts. I’d much rather try to simply state the differences between the sets I’m comparing so as to better explain the set I’m reviewing.

TRN MT4 ($17)

TRN MT4

TRN noticed a trend in the hobby as the MT4 was announced right in the middle of the 2-DD extravaganza that took over the budget arena within the hobby. Up to the MT4 we hadn’t seen a Dual-DD set which was priced so low. Coincidentally the MT4 wasn’t just a couple drivers slapped in a shell. In fact, the MT4 is actually pretty darn good for the price and certainly got a “REC” from me (MT4 Review). The MT4 has its issues but for the price it’s hard to beat up on. The MT4 employs one 10-mm Beryllium coated DD, and one 6-mm DD and is built extremely well for the price.

Differences
To start off I do think the build quality is about the same between these two sets. However, I much prefer the look of the Duo as it just appears more unique looking and slick. The MT4 is a bit larger in comparison and about $10 to $12 cheaper. The MT4 is quite a bit warmer (warm/neutral) than the Duo (bright/neutral) in tonal coloration and is a hair easier to drive.

Bass Region

The MT4 has more bass, period. The one huge criticism I have of the Duo is its lack of substantial bass emphasis. However, the Duo has a denser bass with a more refined note definition down low than the MT4. The MT4 has a fuzziness to the bass with a boomer approach whereas the Duo is punchier and much quicker. Basically, the Duo is more audiophile in its low-end to the more fun bass of the MT4.

Midrange

Straight away the MT4 has the warmer midrange with almost a veil across this 3rd of the mix. Male vocals are thicker and slightly lusher. Female vocals are more tamped down, less shimmery and less mellifluous. The Duo is much clearer & cleaner throughout the midrange with a better detailed sound, better separation and has better resolution. For those who prescribe to a more laid back and warm approach you may like the MT4 better but for everyone else, the Duo truly outperforms the MT4 in every midrange metric.

Treble Region

The Duo is brighter and more finite in its note delivery. I found the Duo to be more emphasized and airier whereas the MT4 seems to almost lack air. In fact, in my review this was one of the cons I found with this set. When I began comparing, I knew that the treble region would go to the Duo and iw as not mistaken. Yes, the Duo is more airy, cleaner, better note definition, better detailed treble, and has better extension to my ears. The Duo’s treble is better balanced in the mix while the MT4 I think needs that last little bit of emphasis up top to take away some of the slight veil which is cast upon the sound.

Technicalities

Both sets offer a decent technical showing but out of the two I think whole heartedly that the Duo simply out-duels and out-classes the MT4 in every technical aspect of the sound. From soundstage depth, layering, separation and details the Duo is a much more mature and audiophile type sound to the budget V-shape of the MT4.

In the end

Friends, for $17 I think the MT4 is a very nice set and still REC it all day long for fans of a warmer and more laid-back approach and who like some low-end boom. However, this one isn’t even close if you are after a sound that is refined and clean. Truly the Duo is a bargain at $29 which is only $12 more than the MT4! For me, I feel the Duo is a runaway winner here.

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Graph courtesy of Ian Fann, thank you very much!

Truthear X-Crinacle Zero ($49)

Zero

One of the larger hype trains iems within the budget space in the last year is the Truthear Zero. The Zero is priced a bit more than the Duo at $50 US and was tuned by YouTube legend Crinacle (of YouTube renown) in a surprise collaboration. I’ve owned this set for quite some time and have yet to review it, but I’ve grown to appreciate the Zero. The Zero comes equipped with a 10mm & 7.8mm Dynamic Drivers and is very well tuned, so long as the tuning agrees with you. To be honest the Zero is a very polarizing iem in the community and I feel you either love it or hate it.

Differences
Both sets are built in a budget way, but both are built nicely and truthfully, I don’t think either is better than the other. I do like the look of both about the same. The Zero is a bit larger than the Duo so that is something you should consider. I’d say the Zero has a bit better accessory but not by much. I find the Duo is slightly harder to drive. Between the two the Duo has a brighter and more detailed sound but both sets are more mid-centric however I will get into all that now…

Bass Region

Definitely the Zero carries much more sub-bass presence. That said, the Zero has a bit slower bass. More boomy. The Duo has a more detailed and clean bass response yet still can bump when it needs to. The Zero sounds a bit flabbier than the Duo. The mid-bass quantity is also larger on the Zero but not by much, in fact the mid-bass gets rolled off extremely early on the Zero (one of its selling points) which you’ll either really like, or not. The Duo has more of a hard lined presence even with a less full bass. It’s tighter, punchier, and has better details in this area.

Midrange

Both sets are very similar in the midrange. Both show off thinned out male vocal and both have more shimmery females. Although, I feel the Duo sounds a slight bit more controlled and detailed. The Zero is more recessed in the lower midrange and slightly shouter in the upper-mids. I like female vocals on both iems but I think the Duo comes across a bit more in control and more lustery. Possibly less natural though. The Duo boasts better details by a hair, but without question; both sets sound extremely clean in the midrange. Both sets offer very nice vocals. For me though, I’ll take the newer and less expensive Duo’s midrange. It’s more vibrant but somehow doesn’t walk into the shouty area as easily. Plus, the Duo has better macro-dynamics in the midrange as it is simply more full sounding. Not by much but doing a back and forth these are things that I’ve noticed.

Treble region

Without a doubt the Duo has the airier, more detailed and more punchy treble. I find that details emerge much easier on the Duo as well. Both iems have decent extension into the upper treble past 10k but as a whole the Duo simply “outshines” (pun-intended) the Zero. The Duo has more treble bite and body and is more refined to my ears. Keep in mind that this isn’t by a country-mile, but I do think the Duo represents this region with a hair more skill.

Technicalities

You can basically chalk this entire paragraph up to the Duo. The Duo has a less narrow stage, better depth and the Duo has a better detailed showing across the board. I will say that both sets do well with imaging, I didn’t think one was miles better than the other.

In the end

I know after reading you’d think the Duo is a much better iem. This is not necessarily true, at all. The defining characteristic of what makes something better than something else comes down to you, the reader and what you like. This is from MY perspective friends. I do think the Duo is a better set and it’s cheaper, built just as well, maybe less attractive but I think it performs better. Of course, you may not like that neutral/bright sound, and you may want a more su – bass boosted set? This is really a question of preference as these two are actually different enough.

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Graph courtesy of Ian Fann, thank you very much!

QKZ X-HBB Khan ($39)

Khan

Another collab iem, another Dual-DD iem and another budget oriented iem that has rolled-off mid-bass in expectation of a cleaner and more resolute midrange. To be honest I really enjoy the Khan. Again, it is another set that you either love or hate, it’s very polarizing. The Khan came about as an answer to some of the shortcomings or better said the “preferences” of HBB (Bad Guy Good Audio Reviews of YouTube fame) of the Truthear Zero. Truly, the Zero and Khan are almost Carbon copies of eachother with only subtle differences. However, they are meaningful differences.

Differences
How about the differences between the Duo and the Khan. First off, the Khan is accessorized much better, in fact it isn’t even close. The Kahn is built slightly better and looks better as well to me. Though that last sentence is definitely up for debate because the Duo does look pretty fly. The Khan is quite literally exactly the same as far as size and shape goes to the Zero with only miniscule differences and is also much larger than the Duo. The Khan is warmer in tonality with a more natural and organic take on the spectrum and my library of music.

Bass Region

Starting with the bass, the Khan has the more beefed-up low end with more boom and rumble. Some may consider this set a basshead iem (I don’t but I’m not everyone) and in the same breath many call the bass flabby (I don’t but I’m not everyone). The Duo has a much tighter, speedy, detailed and punchy bass while the Khan is more one-noted and slow in comparison. This doesn’t mean the Duo is better friends. I happen to love bass so for me it’s a difficult choice. Most certainly the Duo has a better-quality bass region, without question. Still, I wish that CCA would’ve bumped up the bass about four db’s because this wouldn’t even be a question as to which would be better. Do you like warm, full sounding and boomy or do you like snappy, fast, punchy and tight?

Midrange

The midrange of the Khan comes across warmer and fuller sounding yet still relatively clean (unless a bass heavy song is playing) which is a nice balance. For instance, I find that even though the Khan and Zero graphs are almost identical, the Khan still has better note weight. The same is true against the Duo. The Khan has a slightly thicker, warmer sound but also, it’s slightly more veiled. The Duo is simply more neutral across the midrange, more resolute, with an airier feeling in the Mids and cleaner all the way through. The Duo has the better detailed replay, but I do find the Khan is a hair more musical and emotional. The upper-mids are also more forward on the Duo with a sparkler and more uplifted female vocal. Pick your poison really, both sets offer a different take on the midrange, yet both are also good at what they do for the asking price.

Treble Region

Just like the Zero, the Khan is much less bright and doesn’t pick up the macro-nuances and micro details quite like the Duo. The Duo is much more emphasized where the Khan sounds like it’s rolled off a slight bit earlier. The Khan has a laid-back treble to the Duo’s very bright sounding upper 3rd. I realize the graph says the Khan should be brighter than it is but… This won’t be the last time I tell you that graphs are a horrible way to define the sound of an iem (just an outline people). Anyways, the Duo is again… cleaner to a degree, more refined throughout the mix, and it has a better treble punch and extension. On the flipside the Duo is also possibly more fatigue inducing in this region with an easier going sound yet still having enough treble boost for good instrumentation. The Khan also has a thicker and more bodied treble.

Technicalities

Just copy and paste what I said with the Zero comparison. The Duo simply out-duels the Khan in the area of technicalities. Well of course it does! The Duo has a slightly larger and more airy stage, more balanced across the mix, less bass bloat, better separation, both sets have decent imaging, but the Duo also brings out the nuances better. Pretty much across the board again for the Duo. Of course, I also didn’t add in a comparison with a set tuned similarly as the Duo, so these comparisons are pretty skewed.

In the end

Both sets are very nice and do what they do very well for being so cheap. Both sets offer two different flavors of sound, even more so than the Duo vs Zero. The Khan coming across even warmer to the Duo which is very vibrant. Again, this is another preference battle but really, I used the Khan to hopefully explain how the Duo sounds a little better.

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Graph courtesy of Ian Fann, thank you very much!


Duo

Is it worth the asking price?

I suppose the answer to this question lies in you. I can answer for me and my wallet and my ears, but I do think the Duo is the type of set that you will either jive with, or not. CCA did not go the safe route and I kind of applaud them for it. It’s risky to create an iem that toes the fatigue line and pushes the boundaries of what color and emphasis can do to the overall sound. I for one think the Duo is a very good set. The technical ability alone puts the Duo in rarified air with some of the better detail retrieval iems in the price point. Relax, I didn’t say the best. Anyways, the Duo does things other sets can’t do quite the same but to get there CCA had to crank up the resolution… so to speak.

The Why…

This is simple, because to my ears the Duo is one of the more capable sets in the price point. Built very well with one of the better-looking faceplates and a It has a speckless and clean sound signature that is very speedy and cold-balanced that doesn’t negate dynamics or musicality. Friends, I just have to come out and say it, the CCA Duo is an extremely good sounding iem. I do think that EQ’ing a few db’s of low-end will take this set to an even better place as well, so that’s something to think about. After spending so much time with them it is very hard for me to find negatives for such a low price. This one is an actual, real life, bona-fide… NO BRAINER! Yes, the Duo is worth every penny.

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Ratings (0-10)

Note: all ratings are based upon my subjective judgment. These ratings are garnered against either similarly priced sets or with similar driver implementations or styles with the unique parameters of my choosing. In the case of the CCA Duo ratings below, that would be $20-$35 iems in any configuration, not just Dual-DD. Please remember that “ratings” don’t tell the whole story. This leaves out nuance and a number of other qualities which make an iem what it is. A “5” is exactly average and please take into consideration the “lot” of iems these ratings are gathered against. $20-$35 US is a broad scope of iems and so seeing a 9 better mean something special. My ratings are never the same and each set of ratings tells a different story. Each time you read one of my ratings it will be unique to that review. Basically, I create a Rating that makes sense to me.

Aesthetic

-Build Quality: 9.3
-Look: 9.0
-Accessories: -.- (At this price Accessories don’t apply)

Overall: 9.1

Sound Rating

-Timbre: 8.5
-Bass: 9.0
-Midrange: 9.2
-Treble: 9.0
-Technicalities: 10.0

Overall: 9.1

Ratings Summary:

These ratings are pretty easy to understand and not much to summarize. The lot of iems that the Duo is battling for your dollar in is any set between $20 and $35. There are a ton of decent to good iems here. I won’t go into detail about all of those sets but there are a few that really perform quite well. Namely the Reecho SG-01 Ova, Simgot EW200, Kiwi Ears Cadenza etc. There are obviously more sets which will give the Duo headaches but in truth, not many of these sets can outright-outperform the Duo. Some may be more musical, some may be more fun, better timbre. Still, none are blatantly more technical and detailed, and none are straight up cleaner or more precise.

The CCA Duo is without question a nice set that can go up against any in the price point in my humble opinion and the ratings I gave speak to that. The only Rating that could go either way is “timbre”. Honestly, what is “correct timbre” or “good timbre”? That is wholly subjective I every way. Some may think the Duo has amazing timbre that’s lifelike and great while others may despise the bright and thinner type sound and may think that the timbre is not that good. So, there will always be some questionable ratings from me, I can surely admit that. In fact, I really detest Rating anything as I believe they are way too simplified and don’t explain anything. I like nuance and the recognition of nuance in everyday life as well as with my audio devices.

Duo

Conclusion

To conclude my full written review of the CCA Duo, I just want to give a thank you and shout out to Tyvan Lam as well as KZ Audio for providing this very well done iem. Guys and gals, I really love writing these reviews. I am not the best at it, and I’m trying to understand and grow more in the hobby with my writing every day and I can admit that I am not as learned as some folks, or not as “Audiophile”. I’m a dude who loves music and loves the devices which replay that music. What I will say is that I explain EXACTLY what I hear every time I write a word. I want to make it clear that I will never be swayed to change my words to suit anyone. It won’t ever happen. I don’t need review samples friends. I don’t. I’d rather keep my integrity and breathe easy knowing I can defend my position on anything I write based on listening experience.

Other Perspectives

Also, please, I implore you all to take some time to check out other reviewers’ thoughts about the CCA Duo. We are not nearly all the same. We all have different music libraries, likes and dislikes, preferences, hearing abilities and we all haven’t been down the same path in audio. I say this in every review; make sure to read, listen to, or watch other perspectives so that you will have a good understanding about the Duo and can make a better-informed purchase.

With all that said I also want to thank you the reader for checking out this or any review that I write. It means a lot, it’s great for the website and my best wish is that it helps you to make a purchasing decision. Please leave a comment at the end of this review or ask any question and I will surely try to get to them. Take care and as always… God Bless!

Duo

nxnje

500+ Head-Fier
CCA Duo - Going bright neutral
Pros: - Very good treble extension, air and details
- Forward midrange with good clarity and layering
- Nice imaging and good stage width
- Unusual tuning in this price range, which is great especially because it’s a CCA product
- Super sturdy and good looking shells
- Price-to-performance ratio
Cons: - The low end needs more body and weight
- The excessively-linear bass impacts vocals and instruments’ timbre by making them slightly less natural and rich
- Sometimes too bright
- Lackluster set of accessories, as usual

Introduction​

CCA has always been offering more balanced and pleasant tunings than KZ, its “sister brand”, starting from the old CCA C10 which was a real surprise in the Chi-Fi industry back in 2019.
After the big praises for the D-Fi and the provocative Krila marketing, the Duo from CCA comes out trying to surprise with its dual DD configuration.

Disclaimer: the CCA Duo were provided by CCA free of charge as a review sample in order to write some impressions. I do not represent CCA in any way and this is not promotional content.
At the time of the review, the CCA Duo were on sale for $30.

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Technical Specifications​

  • Configuration → 2 x 7mm DD
  • Sensitivity → 106 ± 3 dB
  • Impedance → 18 ± Ω
  • Frequency Response → 20 Hz – 40000 Hz
  • Cable → 1,2m 5N copper silver-plated cable with 0.78mm 2-PIN connector
  • Plug Type → L-shaped gold plated 3,5mm jack connector

Packaging​

Nothing new under the sunlight: KZ and CCA keep using the same packaging and the same set of accessories. This is what you get in box:
  • The CCA Duo
  • The detachable 2-PIN cable
  • One set of KZ starline tips (S, M, L sizes) and one pair of foam tips
  • User manual

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Design and Build Quality​

CCA Duo’s design is very cool with a sturdy plastic shell and a metal faceplate. The shells are lightweight and well built, the nozzle is neither too long or short and there isn’t any shell wing that could cause discomfort.
I think KZ nailed it in every way: shape, size and design.

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Cable​

The cable is detachable, but unfortunately it’s not different from any other KZ/CCA stock cable. In any case, it’s still flexible, comfortable to wear and doesn’t have any microphonic-effect issue.

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Comfort and Isolation​

The CCA Duo are very comfortable both thanks to the rounded and smooth shape with no wings and or sharp edges and the low weight. There isn’t any pressure issue too, at least on my sample.
Isolation is a very tad above average, so no issues for outdoor listening sessions or commuting.

DSC00360.jpg

Sound​

GEAR USED FOR THE TEST
DAC: Topping E30
AMP: Topping L30
Mobile phones: Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge
Dongle: Apple Type-C dongle, Truthear SHIO
Portable DAPs: Benjie S8/AGPTEK M30B
Other sources: Presonus AudioBox iONE

Do they need an amplifier?
No, they don’t strictly need an amplifier, but they don’t dislike a bit more juice (if you can deal with the bright treble when the Duo get louder).

Sound signature
The CCA Duo are a neutral bright set and this is good news considering that we’re still not used to this kind of signatures on KZ and CCA products.

Lows: even though the Duo cannot reach the lowest registers they deliver a pretty clean sub-bass that does not shake your head but it’s a pleasant foundation for almost every genre.
The bass is not as meaty and full-bodied as on KZ and CCA usual set. In fact, I find the bass to be speedy and agile but thinner than it should be in a neutral tuning, thus leading to limited texturing capabilities.
It’s a missed opportunity as with slightly more bass the improvements would have been very substantial. Bassheads should stay away, while others will find a fresh signature in CCA’s lineup.

Mids: the mids are not recessed and instead they are a real star in the mix, with forward instrument presentation and energetic vocals. Female vocals don’t sound hot and sibilance is very uncommon (not totally absent, but it’s definitely rare), but female singers that usually have a very dense and warm voice sometimes lack a bit of depth, and same can be said for male vocals that are the first affected by the low bass quantity and body.
Lower piano notes, too, seem to lack that kind of depth that one expects when digging through the lower octaves, and this is maybe due to the very linear bass.
Overall, the mids have good performance, and also the separation and layering are good for the price, but the timbre is not always on point and this makes me sad because I find the Duo missing just two or three minor things that are very important for one that really values musicality and naturalness when listening to music.

Highs: the highs are bright, not for sensitive people and very detailed. The sound is airy, open, but could become hot at high volumes. I think the CCA Duo perform very well at low volumes, whereas high volumes tend to make the higher-end sound a bit brighter than it should. Overall, anyway, CCA has done a great job with the treble extension here and I am happy to see them concentrating on neutral bright stuff too.

Soundstage is wide with average depth and height. Imaging is good with easy-to-pinpoint instruments and vocals for the price.

Some comparisons​

CCA Duo vs TRI Star River (with both switches “up”)​

The TRI Star River were one of the very few treblehead’s IEMs under 50$ and now they have a very tough set to compete with.
To sum-up the main differences, the CCA Duo have generally better treble extension and air with slightly more details, whereas the TRI Star River portray vocals and instruments with a more accurate timbre and they generally have a tad more bass body (even though they are not champions in that regard too) and meat. With the low-end switch “down”, they kinda become more similar in the bass section but the Duo still have better treble extension and the Star River still maintain the crown in the low-end.
Technicalities are very similar, with the Duo edging the Star Riven in soundstage width and height, and the Star River having better stage depth and slightly better layering overall.
Build quality is good on both but the Duo feel like a slightly more premium product in the hands, even though Star River’s faceplate is very well done too. The longevity is generally lower when tuning switches are used, so the Duo are likely to last longer, but who knows.
Both are very comfortable and isolation is on par more or less. Both also come with an average quality cable in the box, so this is a tie again.

CCA Duo vs KZ PR2 x HBB​

The PR2 have much better bass body, impact and textures, the midrange is more recessed on the PR2 and the highs are more coherent and have better extension on the Duo.
The PR2 are technically superior in separation but it seems like Duo’s well done and very open treble helps with the perceived details and resolution. Imaging is not on very different levels and in fact I can’t hear very noticeable differences.
I like both in terms of design and that’s very subjective, and both are well built but the Duo seem slightly more refined in the hands.
Comfort and isolation go hands down to the Duo, while stock cable is almost identical so there’s no winner in that regard.

Final Thoughts​

The Duo are serious contenders in their price brackets: they value resolution, details and price-to-performance.
What’s missing is a bit of meat and body in the low end, which would really improve the timbre of some vocals and instruments especially in the lowest octaves, even though everything else really made me enjoy my listening sessions.
Shout out to CCA for these new babies: I really hope to see a further improvement on an hypothetical Duo “Pro version” since there are just a few refinements needed to make these even better.
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kesobie
kesobie
Awesome write up man!
nxnje
nxnje

ToneDeafMonk

Previously known as TheDeafMonk
CCA DUO- A Well Done Neutral Bright
Pros: - Crisp, Clean, Mids and highs
- bass quality good
- female vocals mostly spot on
- price to performance
-upper end has no harshness
Cons: -bass is a bit too lean to be considered neutral not enough texture or weight to make instruments sound natural
- same for male vocals not enough weight and sounds thin in the upper mids
- sometime female vocals sounded not perfect with timbre again
- not a all rounder for all Genre's
20230805_103147.jpg

My sincere Thanks to Tyvan from KZ for providing the sample for me.

Purchase and information Link here:
https://www.kztws.com/en-ca/products/cca-duo

Let me first start off saying that of ypu are looking for a neutral/bright tonality in a IEM this one you should take a look at.

The CCa DUO has alot of great things going for it.

While I prefer IEM's with a bit more bottom end, I can totally see the appeal for thoose who prefer this tuning.

As far as most of the trending Dual Dynamic Driver options that came out so far in 2022 and midway through 2023 this is one of the better tuned ones.

I am glad CCA decided to take a step away from your typical and try to go for this sound signature Bravo!

DUO.png


The Bass, mids and treble are done clean and without harshness or fatigue.

20230805_103231.jpg


The drivers themselves sound like a quality product as was the shell shape and design. It was clear some thought went into the DUO.

My only real criticism comes from the bottom octaves and what that does to correct tonality of vocals and instrumental and that's where the DUO for me looses big marks. Some stuff is forgivable bit If I am constantly saying to myself ummm that guitar sounds off or did Shaggy get snipped? Thats not great.

20230805_103128.jpg



When I first listen to the DUO without any comparison I was alot more e anamoured by its clean playback.
It was not until I started to do a shootout and detailed comparison with other iem's that I started to pick it apart more for its flaws.

Now that bieng said I think the DUO is worth every penny and all 4 IEM's in the shootout represent great value for thier respected sounds signatures.

So I picked 3 other IEM that would help give you a sense of the overall tunings of each and spent alot of time listening and comparing.

I first picked a point of the graph like stage, and then proceeded to listen to songs from my playlist I knew well to each one of the IEM's not going from memory bit actually a listening shootout. Sometimes the same song more than once per IEM to make my impressions were correct.

Then I assigned a value 1-50 as to how well the IEM scaled up and recorded that. Moving along to the next catagory and so forth.
Mids,
Highs,
Male Vocales,....
Next I plotted everything on a spider graph as a visual representation of what I heard for comparison.

CCA DUO COMPARE.png


My overall conclusions were thus:

I thought the CCA DUO sounded thin on the mids and bass not giving enough note weight.

The Truthear Hola: was the warmest smoothest sounding out of the bunch and clearly had the best stage.

The Truthear Crin Zero Red:
Has the deepest blackest background, the best for overall resetting your sensibilities with a Un-offensive balanced sound signature.

The New Moondrop Chu2:
Not the old Chu that's for sure this one is alot more balanced out not so tip end heavy. In fact the Chu2 had the best bass quality and quantity of the bunch overall .aking the Chu2 the move V shaped fun IEM.

So overall 4 different tunings and each one will appeal to different people.

graph-3.png


To conclude, I think CCA is onto something with this tuning, a bit more polish in the bottom end and you would have a fantastic all rounder.

As it is I would honestly say if your looking for a excellent value with a more neutral bright to end but without treble head levels and prefer a non bassy IEM spend your money on the CCA DUO worth every penny and you will enjoy it very much.

This is the TDM that's what my ears observed. Thanks for reading.

If you prefer watching here is the video:
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Tamizhan
Tamizhan
If one's going to assume that similar drivers are used in rhapsody, would you say same issues persists or somethings are better? I'm concerned about the tonality and timbre perhaps

littlenezt

100+ Head-Fier
Midrange Lovers on a Budget !
Pros: +Midcentric
+Forward & Intimate Vocals
+Technicalities
+Close to Neutral
Cons: -Obviously not for Basshead (not really a cons)
-Cable
-Packaging
CCA DUO
2 x 7mm DD
$40

1690798271204.jpg
Hi there, before I begin this review, let me first thank CCA for sending the sample unit for me, rest assured my review is always going to be unbiased and 100% my own opinion.

You can get the CCA DUO here :
Shopee DUO:https://id.xiapibuy.com/product/342020911/20191373240/
AliExpress DUO:https://s.click.aliexpress.com/e/_onsFzv1
Official website:https://www.kztws.com/products/cca-duo

Unboxing

1690798271282.jpg1690798271275.jpg1690798271267.jpg1690798271256.jpg1690798271245.jpg1690798271215.jpg1690798271159.jpg1690798271167.jpg1690798271151.jpg

Build Quality
of the IEM is your typical KZ and CCA type, metal faceplate with plastic body, its not the most premium build of an IEM but it does the job done.
you can also see the dual DD from the body itself
1690798271227.jpg

same with the cable, its the old "KZ BIHUN CABLE" that what I always said for this exact cable
1690798271178.jpg
its... ah no comment on this cable, it just get the job done. hahaha.


Fitting

1690798481540.jpg
Myself personally don't have any problem with fitting, but I do prefer the fitting with aftermarket eartips (Sony Hybrid)

SOUND
is tested using iFi UNO, Stock Cable, Sony Hybrid Eartips
Music is mostly from Apple Music (J-POP, Anisong, J-Rock, RAP, EDM, Jazz, Metal)

Tonality in General the CCA DUO is Harman modified but closer to neutral, almost like VDSF target from M**nd**p B3

it is a Midcentric IEM.

At first I thought the CCA DUO will be more bassy version of the Truthear Zero, but boy I was wrong, it is more neutral from the Zero, and I do quite enjoy it.

BASS is speedy, has decent punch, and definitely not for basshead. It has good rumble, deep extension but the bass quantity itself is not that boosted.

Midrange is neutral, not too thick nor thin, it is forward and intimate, definitely the main focus of this IEM.
Vocal is forward but never shouty and no sibilance is detected. Instrument such as Violin from Violet Evergarden OST, is rendered beautifully on this set.

Treble for my ears the DUO is smooth, no splashiness is found and free from metallic timbre.

Technicalities

Stage is wide, has decent but not exact wall placement, and the shape is not symmetrical between depth and width
I do found the width to be more large vs the depth.

Imaging is 2.5D, its not holographic but definitely not 2D sounding either, it has some depth to the image but not quite on the holographical level.

Detail retrieval is decent, it shows some micro detail especially on its treble region.

Positioning - Separation is good, tested on song such as The Glass Bead Game from Plini, I can easily pinpoint which instrument and there is no overlapping to be heard.

For gaming is usable but not my top choice due to its not symmetrical shape of the stage.



Comparation

Moondrop LAN : has similar price, LAN only has 1DD, LAN has superior built quality and accessories + Packaging, for the sound itself, it has also similar tonality, but the CCA DUO has superior technicalities compared to Moondrop LAN, except stage shape and for gaming.
If you prefer an IEM for gaming, I do recommend the LAN compared to the CCA DUO, if gaming is not your priority then CCA DUO is the one to pick.

Truthear Zero : Probably main inspirations of the CCA DUO exist in the first place. Zero has better packaging and accessories but cost more.
Zero has more bass boost compared to the CCA DUO, the treble is more sparkly on the DUO, technicality wise, CCA DUO beats the Zero on treble details.
build quality is pretty similar, both are definitely not premium and probably both are made from plastic.

BLON X Z Jojo : Also more expensive compared to the DUO. Jojo has totally different tonality compared to DUO, it has BASSSSS. Though due to the shape is exactly the same like the BL05, some people probably going to find difficulties on fitting.

Conclusion

CCA DUO is suitable for individual who love midcentric / neutral sounding IEMs that also wants decent technicality and also on a tight budget.
If you're a basshead, RUNN! the DUO wont satisfy your daily bass needs.

Though, its up to you really, I'm here as a reviewer just giving some data for you to process and judge by yourself,
hopefully my review helps

thats all from me for now,

-littlenezt.
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hokagoteatimereviews
hokagoteatimereviews
Is this a first CCA duo review ? I loved the minimal look. Was hoping to try them.

I am nice to see a mid centric tuning at this range.

Great review! 😄

eagleowl

New Head-Fier
CCA DUO - 2 x 7mm Dynamic Drivers IEM
Pros: Fast and Clean Bass, sounds natural and organic
Clean and Clear Mid Vocal, natural and organic
Treble details, imaging and micro details and instrument separation are good
Good Performance over Price Ratio
Cons: Basic accessories set for the price point
Disclaimer: Thank you and kudos to CCA for arranging this review unit, all herewith are based on own observation with no affiliation nor obligation, noob observation - please enjoy.

Packaging / Presentation :

Packaging in CCA white box. IEMs are well built top plate metal alloy and body resin. Comes with 1 black foam tip, 3 pairs of starline silicon tips in S M and L. Cable is the white flat cable.

Equipment used / Music choices :

ASUS Laptop WIN 11 with Spotify Connect to
  • ifi UNO DAC to FSA Beyond HD Amplifier 6.35SE and Supplier HD Linear Supply
  • Topping DX3PRO DAC to Topping Amplifier L30 6.35SE
  • ifi Zen Dac v2.0 interconnected to ifi Zen Can 3.5SE/4.4BAL
Sony walkman A55 with Fiio A5 Portable Amplifier 3.5SE
LG G7+ 3.5mm SE with Shangling UP5 2.5bal/3.5SE/4.4bal BT via LDAC

Music Tracks - variety of EDM, pop, rock, jazz, country, instrumental, classical, audiophile male/female, chinese / cantonese favourites.

Some of tracks used -
Shatter Me – Lindsey Stirling
4x4=12 – Deadmau5
Need you tonight - INXS,
Jack and Diane - John Mellencamp,
I'm Good - David Guetta and Bebe Rexha,
Dancing in the Dark – Eddie Berman,
Snow Throwing – Lose Again,
IntroOooOoo – Kidkanevil, Daisuke Tanabe,
Brydshot and Bye - Dimlite,
Mushroom Picker Dance - Floex,
Bubbles – Yosi Horikawa,
Ageispolis – Aphex Twin,
Original remastered – Leftfield,
Virtual Reality and Acoustic Guitar Guy – Instrumental only, etc..

Sound Impression :

Decent Affordable Good Sounding Dual Dynamic Drivers IEM

Overall Tonality and Timbre
– Sound Signature is bright with good Weight Tone and Clarity. Overall is Well Balanced tuned set, organic and natural, clean and clear.

Bass – Bass transient speed is fast and snappy and clean, well controlled and accurate, kick drum and strikes are precise. Sounds natural and organic, Sufficient sub bass and mid bass to satisfy most.

Mids – Male and Female vocals are organic natural sounding, forward sounding with good weight tone and clarity.

Treble - Instruments separation and imaging are clear and concise, accurate and precise, cymbals and high hats are good, have good micro details and nuances. Decent performance for dual DD.

Soundstage is good in width, depth and height.

Fit and isolation is pretty good.

Coherence of the 2DD is good.

All testing are done using the stock tips and cable.

CCA DUO [USD29.00 with USD10.00 discount currently]

For those that are interested, Non affiliated link below:

CCA DUO (Buy now and get an automatic discount of $10) (kztws.com)

Comparison to

BQEYZ K2 [USD41.24 currently]

BQEYZ K2 is a 2DD + 2BA IEM, has been a favourite in my collection item for quite a while. Due to its budget friendly price and sound performance, it has been many’s favourite keeper as well. However when A/B with CCA DUO, the DUO is tuned with more bass, thus exhibit more sub bass rumble and mid bass thump which is more satisfying and enjoyable, the K2 bass has sub bass roll off and may sound a little hollow or wooly as compared. The K2 has 2BA for mids and highs which may seems to be an advantage, however, the DUO is tuned very well for both mids and highs, it is definitely no slough when compared.

Final Thoughts

CCA DUO at the current discount of USD10 at USD29, it is probably one of the most budget set of 2DD in the market now. There is little flaw and tick many boxes in sound performance over the price. Thank you for reading and enjoy your music guys.

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XerusKun
XerusKun
They really nail the tuning on these. Plus their High Mid DD seems to be more linear in the upper treble than the other dual DD IEM.
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