Tanchjim Hana

iceperry

New Head-Fier
Pros: Build Quality, Detail retrieval and separation, Impressive transparency in mids, Treble extension, Refined Bass, Soundstage and Imaging
Cons: Fit! (short nozzle), The detailed and energetic sound may be tiring for longer listening sessions
Intro

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Disclaimer: This review set is a demo set graciously lent to me by Oardio and the review is written of my own accord and all thoughts are my own. The Hana is available for purchase from Oardio through their website should you find yourself interested in a pair. For more reviews by us, check out our website at perrivanaudio.com

This is a review for the Tanchjim Hana IEMs. Tanchjim made a name for themselves through the success of their earlier flagship, the Oxygen, a well-tuned single dynamic driver. This time, Tanchjim attempts at designing another similarly spec-ed IEM with a different tuning. Appearance-wise, it looks like the Oxygen with a paint job. Coming in at an SRP of $225 (SGD), it exists in a different price bracket from the Oxygen and we shall see how the Hana fares.

Accessories and Build Quality (Score: 9/10)

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The Tanchjim comes in a cube-shaped packaging, and everything shares the colour theme of the earpieces themselves. Unboxing was quite a premium and enjoyable experience. Tanchjim is also pretty generous with the tips, providing 2 sets, one for vocals and one for bass. Included is also a luxurious white zip case. This has all the vibes of a branded leather pouch, furnished with a rose gold zip. The included cable for the Hana is also following the white and rose gold aesthetic, something I quite thoughtful. The entire unboxing experience made me feel like I was unboxing a piece of fashion accessory or jewellery. Some may find the overall look a little on the feminine side but there's no denying that these are gorgeous.

For the Build Quality, the earpieces themselves are made from Stainless Steel and have significant weight to them. These should be relatively tanky and not have any issues with them failing. The stainless-steel body is coated with white paint, which Tanchjim has included a statement in the box requesting users to be careful to not bump them into hard objects or they may chip. These may be an issue in the future just as in the Moondrop Starfield where paint chips may mar the overall appearance.

Fit (Score: 7/10)

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I gave the fit a separate section this time as I felt it was a potentially divisive issue. The Hana shares the same overall shape as the Oxygen, which gained notoriety for its fit. The Hana has a relatively short nozzle which makes it hard to get a snug fit in the ear canal. This can be solved by tip rolling, with perhaps a pair of Spinfits or some tips with a longer barrel. The greatest problem of me is how the centre of gravity of the earpieces tends to cause the earphones to fall out, especially since they are so heavy.

Another minor problem with the fit is that the cable ear guides are a little loosely shaped and don't always stay securely over my ears. This is usually remedied through the use of the chin slider but the one on the stock cable doesn't seem to work.

Sound (Score: 8.2/10)

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Frequency Response Curve

Sources Used
  • Hiby R5
  • Hiby R6
Albums and Tracks tested with
  • Grease Soundtrack
  • Gryffin - Gravity
  • Michael Bublé - To Be Loved
  • Greenday - American Idiot
  • Fall Out Boy - Save Rock and Roll
  • Ragtime Broadway Recording
  • Taylor Swift - Red

Bass (Score: 8.5/10)

Bass on the Tanchjim Hana is no slouch. It has a decent depth and sub-bass extension is also quite good, providing a satisfying rumble when called upon to deliver. On "We Go Together" of the Grease Soundtrack, the moving bassline is very punchy and detailed. The bass helps keep the sound very lively and enjoyable, good for critical listening without getting too boring or cold.

Listening to some EDM such as tracks from Gryffin, the bass offers punchy beats with a relatively fast decay. Complicated rhythms come out really enjoyably without bleeding or overpowering the mids.

Mids (Score: 8/10)

Moving on to the mids, these are not too recessed despite the mild V-shaped tuning and still retain their own space to shine. Lower mids can come across as a little sterile - Gives a sense of cleanliness (reduced muddiness) but also creates a little bit of a void.

The mids are very well-textured in the vocals. Although I would have preferred more warmth and body in the male vocals, it wasn't too much of a problem but more of a preference. Once again like the bass, there is detail-oriented sound and the mids have a rather dry texture. This can be quite unforgiving to bad recordings and make them a hard listen, but at the same time, bringing out the best of good recordings. Female vocals are noticeably forward and significantly more powerful. On Ragtime Musical's "Sarah Brown Eyes", a male and female vocal duet, they both sounded crystal clear and authoritative without ever really getting shouty.

Instrumental-wise, on Michael Bublé’s rendition of “Mack the Knife”, the trumpets are quite forward, at times a little overly forward and unnatural, throwing the balance of instrumentals and vocals a little off.

Treble (Score: 8/10)

The treble is very well-done with terrific extension, although its flavour may not suit everyone’s tastes. There is no sibilance but is very detail-oriented and can get fatiguing. There is quite a bit of sparkle in the upper end, at times a little too much even. Although the treble is audibly "good quality" treble and not tinny, it’s a little too pronounced and unsustainable for longer listening sessions. That being said, treble heads may appreciate this quality of the Hana.

On Taylor Swift's “All Too Well”, the crashes are a little bit too much and too forward, would be better if more pushed back. It was bordering on being painful and I found myself turning the volume down occasionally.

Overall Sound

The Hana has quite an impressive soundstage and combined with its accurate imaging (e.g. Greenday's Give Me Novacaine intro), provides an engaging and immersive listening experience. This solidifies Hana's capabilities as one primed for critical listening.

Comparisons

Vs TinHiFi T2 Plus (review here)

The tuning on the Hana is reminiscent of the T2 plus. However, I would consider the Hana as an upgrade in sound over the T2 plus in most aspects. The Hana has better detail retrieval and a more palatable presentation as compared to the more aggressive tuning on the T2 plus. The treble is less excitable on the Hana by a little, and I find that I am able to enjoy longer listening sessions than I did with the T2 plus.

However, the fit on the t2 plus is much better than the Hana, mostly because the Hana fit just doesn't work well with my ears. Once again, the fit is subjective, and your experience may vary. If the fit is important to you, I suggest finding somewhere you can demo the fit of the Hanas.

Overall, do keep in mind the price tag of the Hana is more than 3 times that of the T2 plus, and just to manage expectations, don't expect 3 times the sonic improvement, but yes I can attest to a significant step up in sound.

Vs Moondrop KXXS (review here)

There were many initial comparisons made between the KXXS and Oxygen, although the Oxygen was less talked about due to its significantly higher price tag, making it less accessible to the masses. However, the Hana shakes things up with the price tag of $225, making it now cheaper than the KXXS.

Once again, I prefer the fit on the KXXS as it has a longer nozzle to give that secure fit. The Harmanish tuning on the KXXS is much more laid back than the Hana and this becomes a throw up between the two depending on your preference.

Personally, I would pick the KXXS over the Hana as it still has rather impressive detail retrieval, with more warmth and musical twist to things. To date, I still find myself whipping out my KXXS for longer listening sessions at my desk just because of how easy-going it sounds. I would go out on a limb to say that most people would have preferences that lie closer to the KXXS and the Hana.

Conclusion

The Tanchjim Hana was quite enjoyable borders between the verdicts of "not bad" and "great", owing to seemingly insignificant issues but ultimately deal-breakers such as its fit. One would have thought Tanchjim would have learnt its lesson and pay more attention to consumers after the reception and feedback from the Oxygen. However, giving credit where its due, the Tanchjim Hana is a provides a good combination of beauty and technicalities as it strikes a balance between musical and analytical, making for an enjoyable sound signature.

I think it's important to emphasise that the Hana is not a cheaper Oxygen despite their similarity in construction. They both have very different tunings and exist in 2 different price brackets. In no way did I find that the Hana would displace the Oxygen. This was an attempt to create an IEM with a different tuning.

If you find yourself in search of something for critical listening, there are few IEMs that perform as well as the Hana in this price range. The Hana manages to maintain its detail-oriented sound whilst keeping things interesting with its fast and punchy bass. It is quite intense in its presentation and forward in the vocals, which some may definitely find too tiring, especially if you're more used to Harman-ish tunings from IEMs such as the Oxygen. However, it's lack of versatility is what stops it short of greatness for me. It shines in a selection of songs and borderlines on being a little too shouty or intense in others.
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Headphones and Coffee

Previously known as Wretched Stare
Bright and Detailed beauty
Pros: Looks, comfort, great accessories and build quallity.
This is a Bright Detailed and energetic sounding IEM
Cons: Short Nozzles and Bright sound signature will definitely not be for everyone.
The Hana comes in some truly premium looking packaging, the unboxing experience alone is a enjoyable process.

The Hana shares the same shell as the Oxygen but after that its totally a different IEM. The Accessorizes are topnotch everything is just as I would expect fro this price range and beyond. The cable is both beautiful and durable but I do think a braided pure copper cable would have looked better with it. The IEMs themselves have a short nozzle (Just like the Oxygen) but to me are super comfortable. The case is beatiful and protects the IEM but has no pockets or room for a small player.

Sound:

BASS: Is rapid and tight slightly boosted but far from boomy it is almost balanced but can provide some quality Bass when need be with a good texture and detail in Sub and Mid Bass.

MIDS: The mids are very pronounced and clear there is great detail and energy here. Vocals are forward are there is some excellent details here, far more than I was expecting from a single DD IEM they can be pleasant depending on the recording.

HIGHS: Treble here has some great extension and power, the shimmer is pleasurable in most cases put has some peaks and certain recordings could enhance this further. Still its very good at the details here too.

SOUNDSTAGE: Very good Width with equal depth seems natural and open with details beyond what I was expecting. Imaging is accurate.

Summary :

This is not bad if your into Bright Sounding IEMs , Vocals especially female can be very nice on the HANA, This is a very well made IEM that is Bright, Energetic, has a good amount of Low end punch and is very detailed sounding. If thats your thing this is great for you. I can see this working for orchestral and acoustical music , classic and even some classic rock ballads. I can appreciate it even if its far from my traget signature.

https://www.oardio.com

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vas-tomsk
vas-tomsk
Yes, women's vocal is very good.

RikudouGoku

Member of the Trade: RikuBuds
Pros: Build quality
Packaging
Accessories
Cable
Bass quality, well textured, tight and fast
Soundstage
Details
Instrument Separation
Cons: Male vocals lack warmth and thickness
Female vocals are sibilant on some songs or too bright to sound natural on others
Lower treble has peaks making electric guitars too sharp ("Death by treble")
Not versatile in what it can play due to either sibilance or sharpness
Value
Might be easy to chip the paint
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Disclaimer: Bought on HifiGO with a discount for this review, thank you very much

Price: 160 usd

Specifications:

Driver unit: dynamic

Impedance: 32ohm

Sensitivity: 110dB/mW

Frequency response: 5-50 kHz

Plug: 3.5mm straight plug

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Accessories:

S/M/L “treble enhancing” Silicone tips

S/M/L “bass enhancing” Silicone tips

10 pairs of dust filters

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Cable: It is a “4” core cable, but it is enveloped by some other material making it look and feel like a 2-core cable. It has a working chin-slider, ear-hooks and both the divider and the splitter are made out of metal.

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Build: It has weight to it that makes it feel very premium. Fully made out of stainless steel so the durability should be very good but only time can tell. It is vented and it is visible that the shell has 2 pieces stuck together.

It is a very clean looking iem and I have no complaints about that, just do keep in mind that they (Tanchjim) have a warning about the possibility of the paint chipping. So that makes me wonder how easy it is to chip it when they actually state it upfront.

Fit: It definitely is a shallower fit than average, but I have no problems with it at all. Only caveat is that the stock tips (as usual) doesn’t fit me very well so the use of 3rd party tips is recommended. Once I have it in my ears and fully sealed, I don’t need to adjust it so the fit is very good for me.

But as I am Asian the fit might be intended for Asian people so do keep in mind that it might very well be bad for you if a shallow fit is a red flag for you.

Comfort: Quite comfortable for me, but the weight and size (it covers my entire ear) makes it feel more fatiguing during longer sessions. (you get fatigued by the sound way before you get it from the physical shape.)

Isolation: Above average. Since it covers my entire ear and because the vent is faced downward and not towards the wind (my ears covers the vent) it is pretty good.

Setup: JDS Labs Atom + Topping E10, stock cable, Final Type E Tips L

Lows: The bass in the Hana is very good when it comes to the quality, the speed, tightness and texture are on a high level. Quantity isn’t exactly neutral but a bit boosted, but it isn’t a lot of it. It simply brings out the bass when the song calls for it.

Mid-bass: The texture of the mid-bass is heard very good on a track like Hiroyuki Sawano – Pretenders (01:18-01:47) and is punchy and has enough quantity for it to be fun while at the same time not muddying the rest of the sound.

On Metallica – fight fire with fire (01:11-01:52) the bass is fast enough to keep up with the machine-gun-drumming while having enough quantity to feel each individual strike.

Sub-bass: Well textured and powerful when the song calls for it. Like in Will Sparks – Sick like that (03:08-03:22).

And you can hear the rumble the in Contiez ft. trey G – Trumpsta (Djuro remix) (01:30 – 01:43) but not a lot. But not enough to make a song like Aurosonic – All I need (progressive mix) (0:00-0:26) exciting and fun.

Mids: very clear and detailed vocals but female vocals are more forward than male vocals while also being a bit more natural. Acoustic guitars and pianos sound good though.

Female-vocals: On a track like Hiroyuki Sawano – The Way (01:55-02:47) the female vocals are reproduced in a very beautiful way with the bright and very clean sound.

This is however not entirely good as it is a bit too bright on some songs like in Hiroyuki Sawano – Aliez (02:05-02:25) where it is starting to show signs of sharpness.

And on something like Evanescence – bring me to life (01:18-01:35) it is “death by treble” really not good on something like that.

Male-vocals: The male vocals need more warmth and thickness for it to sound natural in general. But there are some where it is quite good with.

Hiroyuki Sawano – Pretenders (00:57-01:17) has the male vocals that suits the Hana, it is higher pitched than normal and therefore doesn’t need as much warmth and thickness as I would want it to have.

While on Hiroyuki Sawano – Scapegoat (00:13-00:57) it lacks some warmth and thickness.

Highs: Here is the big bottleneck of the Hana. The peaks in the lower treble makes it so that nearly all electric guitars are too sharp.

Linkin Park – Shadow of the Day (03:24-03:42) has quite sharp electric guitars. Same with Deuce – America (01:25-01:52).

Violins sounds very natural and textured, like on Hiroyuki Sawano – Lose (Strings version).

Soundstage: very big soundstage both in depth and width and quite impressive for a single DD. On something like Two steps from hell – archangel, it sounds very epic due to the soundstage.

Tonality: Reverse L-shaped, with decent timbre but is bottlenecked by the lower treble and upper mids making some female vocals and a lot of electric guitars sound sharp/sibilant.

Details: Above average, impressive for a single DD (although it probably “cheats” a bit due to the upper-mid/lower- treble boost).

Instrument Separation: Above average, not a problem even on faster tracks and on orchestral music.

Songs that highlight the IEM:

Music: Hiroyuki Sawano – pretenders really sounds amazing with the Hana.

Orchestral and OST´s like the kind Two steps from hell makes are very good on the Hana, it utilizes the strength in the Hana (technicalities like the instrument separation and the soundstage) together with the clean sound to make it energizing and “epic”.

Good genres: Orchestral, OSTs, Acoustic songs

Bad genres: Rock, metal, pop, Trance, Hip-hop, EDM


Comparisons:

Moondrop KXXS:
Treble quantity is similar but less peaky on the KXXS, the Hana sounds a bit more natural unless there are electric guitars in the music in which case it is horrible.

Female vocals are less forward on the KXXS and more natural on the Hana. Male vocals are clearer and more natural on the Hana and makes the KXXS sound like it was “veiled”.

Mid-bass is quite similar in quantity, but the texture and tightness are better on the Hana. Sub-bass also has more texture and is tighter on the Hana while also having a little bit more quantity. The KXXS rumbles a bit more in exchange for tightness.

Soundstage, details and instrument separation are better on the Hana. Timbre is similar.

The KXXS is an easier recommendation because it isn’t nearly as sharp as the Hana is and therefore is more versatile in what it can play. But if you can either handle the treble or you are using it with OSTs, orchestral or acoustic songs then the Hana is the better choice in terms of SQ. Hana is a bit thicker sounding than the KXXS.

Blon BL-05: Treble on the 05 has less peaks but at the same time have some more quantity, they both have equally bad treble for me.

Mids are very similar in quantity but the Hana sounds a bit more natural and detailed on both female and male vocals. Very close here.

Mid-bass is also very similar in quantity, but the Hana is on another level when it comes to the quality. Texture, speed and tightness are better on the Hana. Sub-bass quantity is a bit higher on the 05 but quality is also better here on the Hana, which is a bit faster and tighter but the texture is the biggest difference with the Hana being much better. The 05 rumbles a bit more though and it sounds more natural.

Soundstage, details and instrument separation is better on the Hana. Timbre is a bit better on the 05 due to less sharpness.

I recommend the 05 over the Hana solely due to the price and because the SQ difference isn’t nearly enough for me to justify the Hana over the 05. The Hana is definitely better so if you don’t care about the price then Hana will be the upgrade for the 05. Although for me I take the 05 over the Hana solely because I can actually listen to more of my songs…

Blon BL-03(mesh mod): Treble is a bit lower on the 03 with much less peaks also sounds more natural on the 03.

Female vocals are more forward on the Hana and detail is better but it doesn’t sound as natural as the 03. Male vocals actually have warmth and thickness in the 03 making it sound natural, Hana can’t compare to the 03 here it sounds nowhere near as natural.

Mid-bass quantity in the 03 is higher and have more texture. Speed and tightness are however better with the Hana. Sub-bass have much more quantity, rumble and texture on the 03 but isn’t as tight or fast as the Hana.

Soundstage, details and instrument separation are better on the Hana. Timbre is much better on the 03.

Overall, the 03 sound more natural and more pleasant to listen to (mostly due to the treble). Hana is only better on the soundstage, details, instrument separation and a cleaner bass.


Conclusion: Sadly, Tanchjim really messed up with the Hana. While the packaging and build are really nice and all, they failed at the sound. The most important part about an iem, if they just reduced the lower-treble peaks and maybe a little bit less upper-mids then this might have had a really good sound.

But as it is and at its current price it is simply not worth it and especially when you can get something similar (blon bl-05) for about 3-4 times cheaper. Thanks for reading

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