Bio Cellulose Drivers. Any new headphones using this technology?
Jan 11, 2014 at 3:39 AM Thread Starter Post #1 of 9

Xtralglactic

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I just remember enjoying my Sony MDRE888 which had bio cellulose drivers. I think Creative Aurvana live original had bio cellulose and those were universally praised. Any new headphones that use bio cellulose drivers that anyone know of?
 
Dec 29, 2014 at 7:53 PM Post #3 of 9
Creative Aurvana Live and Live 2 uses them as well
 
Dec 30, 2014 at 12:14 AM Post #4 of 9
I think the new upcoming Audioquest Nighthawk do have a type of this.
And some of the Vsonic iems. Not sure which.
 
Dec 30, 2014 at 1:24 AM Post #5 of 9
It would be interesting to see those used in earphones
 
Jan 2, 2015 at 5:23 AM Post #6 of 9
Never heard of Denon using those drivers?
  I believe Denon's D2000/5000/7000 and Fostex's current TH-600/TH-900 use biocellulose drivers. The general workings of all those are done by Foster.

Maybe the TH-600 but I don´t believe the Denons have them?
 
Jan 2, 2015 at 9:44 AM Post #7 of 9
Denon uses fostex's driver in their popular d1100/2000/5000/7000. But denon made them popular
 
Jan 2, 2015 at 10:07 AM Post #8 of 9
All fostex drivers is not biocellulose. They use different drivers for the TH-900 compared to the old Denons but I don´t know for sure if the D7000 drivers also can be called biocellulose. Sony stopped using it because it was to expensive I believe. 
 
Jan 6, 2015 at 11:13 PM Post #9 of 9
All fostex drivers is not biocellulose. They use different drivers for the TH-900 compared to the old Denons but I don´t know for sure if the D7000 drivers also can be called biocellulose. Sony stopped using it because it was to expensive I believe. 


Vintage Sony range: R10, MDR-CD 1000, 1700, 2000, 3000.

The CD 2000 (open) is still used by some proffessional recording engineers.
 

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