Monoprice 109927 Enhanced Bass Hi-Fi Noise Isolating Earphones, Black

zach8278

New Head-Fier
Pros: Sound, Price, Value
Cons: Cable, Straight Angled Plug, Stock Eartips
I purchased these a long time ago after reading reviews that these were a good budget option in the earphone category.
To save time, i am just going to jump in to the sound quality section..
 
Bass: A little bass light for my tastes, but i can live with it. I doubt people are going to complain with these at the price they are offered at. It has decent punch to it, but like i said, a little light. 
 
Midrange/Vocals: I think these shine at the midrange frequencies. They have warmth, body, and anything else you can think of, well, not anything else, but you get my point. The mids are good, especially for an earphone that costs less than $10.
 
Treble: These have a tiny bit more treble than i would like to have seen, but that is good because it means that they are not rolled off in any way, shape or form. It has good restraint meaning it doesn't go overboard with the high frequencies.   
 
 
Sorry for the mediocre and short review, but i just wanted to get this review posted so it would no longer bug me. 

Neeky

New Head-Fier
Pros: Great sound, great low end extension, rugged, cloth covered cable.
Cons: Cloth cable is a bit noisy, when worn as directed, cable exit is in a bizarre spot.
Ok, I caved and bought 2 pair of these when I needed a mini to regular HDMI cable for a new laptop.  They are impressive.  I like the black color better than the silver too.  One thing I quickly figured out is if you reverse them (R<-->L), the cable exits out the top, and you can then loop it over your ears.  It seems to fit better this way.  By flipping them upside down, the ear tube is still oriented in the proper direction. I'll be making custom silicone molds for them using silicone molding putty normally used for making resin jewelry and food molds.  A whole POUND of molding putty is $18 at our favorite online mega store. I may go as far as also making acrylic molds using the clear casting resin (also food grade) that is also used for jewelry.  
 
Listening: For the past 10 years I've been in an office environment doing software development, and used Grado SR60s and my own Chu Moy amp.  They are great for still being able to hear the phone and people calling my name, but are extremely fatiguing to me, giving me 'hot spots' on my ears. I listen to music at least 6 hours a day.  I now work out of my home, so noise isolation is important.  I actually listen 9-10 hours a day now.  By listen, I'm not referring to audiophile grade audio, we're talking online streaming, usually 128 kbps or 192 kbps if possible, but sometime it's just Pandora.  Anyway, these in ears are great.  I've only used them 2 days now so they're not broken in, and I have Tinnitus that I usually wear $8,000 Oticon Agile Pros for, so the high end is actually pretty smooth, but that's purely due to my high frequency hearing loss.  I know most people state they are a bit too bright on the high end, but they do ok for me.
 
Overall, I'm calling these the best universal fit's I've ever worn.  Now my only comparison are Shure EC2s on high end IEs, but they hold their own.  For $7 it's a no brainer.  I'm buying 3 more pair as soon as I get up another cable order.
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