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With their new 30-day return policy figured I'd give them a try. My LCD-3's will enjoy meeting their baby brother!!! Wonder if they'll do sequential serial numbers... 
Cheers
Cheers
oBrovo makes the EAMT-3A, which is an Air Motion Transfer IEM. AMTs are cousins to planers. You might want to try those, but they aren't cheap, I think.
Their ERIB-2A, ERIB-3a and ERIB-4A are all Planner IEMs (though their web site says AMT, they are planers).
http://www.obravoaudio.com
So, it looks as though Apple will be taking away 3.5mm from their next phone models, and instead force users to use the Lightning port as the sole option for headphone audio. At least that's what the recent rumours are starting to confirm.
I'm interested, is it a totally digital signal passing through the Lightning connector and directly into the headphones? Would it be bypassing the internal DAC of the phone?
There is 0 confiramtion of Apple dropping the 3.5mm jack.
At this point, Apple dropping the 3.5mm connection is only a rumor, so it is a bit premature to get upset about it. The reasons they are supposedly considering it are to allow them to make the phone thinner and more water resistant. I'm fairly sure that if they make this change, there will be inexpensive converters that let you connect using a 3.5mm connector. For the many head-fiers that think the iPhone DAC is inferior (something that measurements of recent models of iPhones seem to refute, btw) and use external DACs, this will no impact at all.
At this point, Apple dropping the 3.5mm connection is only a rumor, so it is a bit premature to get upset about it. The reasons they are supposedly considering it are to allow them to make the phone thinner and more water resistant. I'm fairly sure that if they make this change, there will be inexpensive converters that let you connect using a 3.5mm connector. For the many head-fiers that think the iPhone DAC is inferior (something that measurements of recent models of iPhones seem to refute, btw) and use external DACs, this will no impact at all.
Using converters though, would suck big time. I see no problem with the DAC on my 5S. If I understand correctly, many measurements say the same. (That HP-out is a bigger concern, with some headphones imo.)
Even if you thought the iPhone DAC was equivalent to the DAC in good portable DAC/Amp combo, wouldn't there there be a infinitesimally tiny advantage in removing the iPhone's amp from the single path? I think it's well established that many portable amps are better, if not more powerful, than the iPhone's amp.
I happen to be one of those lucky few that can't distinguish most DACs in A/B testing, so I rarely have to worry about which DAC I use.