CanJam London 2022 Impressions Thread (July 30-31, 2022)
Aug 2, 2022 at 1:23 PM Post #226 of 348
Can someone at the show who heard the u12t and u18s compare the two? If price was no object does the u18s come on top? I find the u18s treble just right for my own preferences. Just wondering if u12t bass and mids are any better?
I listened to both of these back to back. I made some brief notes as I listened to everything on the day and so happy to post them here. Bear in mind these are literally my thoughts jotted down quickly as I was listening.


64 Audio U18s
Clear but has a slight bit of warmth. Nice sub bass. Works well with rock. Mid bass well defined but not as guttural as Trio. Doesn’t slam as hard. Separation good. Details good. Seems a little intimate, similar to Phonix there? Sound clarity good, def know it’s TOTL. Mids well defined, male vocals have exact position. Female vocals well controlled & not too high or harsh. A lot of info and details coming at you though, v good layering, separation etc. Does it obscure musicality just a little? Overall I like it.


64 Audio U12t
A bit more punch than U18s. Very easy listen. Sub bass nice and deep. Feeling it in chest. I prefer mid bass on this though to that of U18s but stills lacks the grrr of DD., but on some tracks not so much. Nice presence on live songs. Think this is a good all rounder. Good with most of my test playlist. Nice extension on highs but is controlled & not too high. Mids good, vocals both female and male get big tick. Think I might prefer U12t to U18s. Really good IEM. Impressed.
 
Aug 2, 2022 at 2:26 PM Post #227 of 348
Can someone at the show who heard the u12t and u18s compare the two? If price was no object does the u18s come on top? I find the u18s treble just right for my own preferences. Just wondering if u12t bass and mids are any better?
I preferred the U18s as it was more balanced, clearer and sweeter. I felt the U12t was like a jack of all trades, good at most things but not great at anything in particular: a bit warm and mushy in comparison. That being said, the Fourté for me was better than the U18S, cleaner, a little more hard hitting and energetic. The Trip was an exaggerated Fourté at both ends but not in a good way.
 
Aug 2, 2022 at 5:08 PM Post #228 of 348
Some casual candids at the show, I was only there for Saturday sadly - but was great fun! I was mostly at the Elise Audio stand - some top guys there.

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Aug 2, 2022 at 6:51 PM Post #229 of 348
Some casual candids at the show, I was only there for Saturday sadly - but was great fun! I was mostly at the Elise Audio stand - some top guys there.
Great photos! Even though the evidence proves otherwise, I did not camp at Elise audio all day :D Cheers to the Staff, great chaps with a palpable passion.
 
Aug 2, 2022 at 7:04 PM Post #230 of 348
OMG you should so take the opportunity! 😃

1659442783421.png

And I can tell both you and @zen87192 that this year's CanJam SoCal is turning out to be a monster show! Here's a list of exhibitors that will be at CanJam SoCal 2022, that were not able to make it to CanJam London 2022:
  • Akoustyx
  • ampsandsound
  • Atlas Cables
  • Audio-Technica
  • Awedyo Audio
  • Bloom Audio
  • Burson Audio
  • CEntrance
  • DALI
  • Dan Clark Audio
  • DUNU
  • FatFreq
  • Feliks Audio
  • Ferrum Audio
  • Headphones.com
  • Linear Tube Audio
  • Manley Labs
  • NAD
  • Pathos Acoustics
  • PrimaLuna
  • Pro-Ject Audio Systems
  • PSB
  • sBooster
  • Schiit Audio
  • Sennheiser
  • Soekris Audio
  • The Source AV
  • Upscale Audio
  • Viva Audio
  • VZR Audio
  • Warwick Acoustics
  • Wells Audio
  • Woo Audio
  • ZMFheadphones
How about Empire Ears?
 
Aug 2, 2022 at 7:09 PM Post #231 of 348
How about Empire Ears?

Here is the current full exhibitor list from the main thread:

64 Audio
Akoustyx
ampsandsound
Astell&Kern
Atlas Cables
Audeze
Audio-Technica
Awedyo Audio
Benchmark Media Systems
Bloom Audio
Burson Audio
Campfire Audio
CEntrance
Chord Electronics
DALI
Dan Clark Audio
dCS
Dekoni Audio
DUNU
Effect Audio
Eletech
Empire Ears
FatFreq
Feliks Audio
Ferrum Audio
Focal
HeadAmp Audio Electronics
Headphones.com
HIFIMAN
InEar
Jerry Harvey Audio
Linear Tube Audio
Manley Labs
Meze Audio
NAD
Noble Audio
Pathos Acoustics
PrimaLuna
Pro-Ject Audio Systems
PSB
RAAL-requisite
RME
Roon Labs
Rupert Neve Designs
sBooster
Schiit Audio
Sennheiser
Soekris Audio
Soundcore
Spirit Torino
The Source AV
Upscale Audio
Vision Ears
Viva Audio
VZR Audio
Warwick Acoustics
Wells Audio
Woo Audio
ZMFheadphones

Edit: Musicteck has also confirmed to me he’ll be there
 
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Aug 2, 2022 at 7:18 PM Post #232 of 348
Here is the current full exhibitor list from the main thread:

64 Audio
Akoustyx
ampsandsound
Astell&Kern
Atlas Cables
Audeze
Audio-Technica
Awedyo Audio
Benchmark Media Systems
Bloom Audio
Burson Audio
Campfire Audio
CEntrance
Chord Electronics
DALI
Dan Clark Audio
dCS
Dekoni Audio
DUNU
Effect Audio
Eletech
Empire Ears
FatFreq
Feliks Audio
Ferrum Audio
Focal
HeadAmp Audio Electronics
Headphones.com
HIFIMAN
InEar
Jerry Harvey Audio
Linear Tube Audio
Manley Labs
Meze Audio
NAD
Noble Audio
Pathos Acoustics
PrimaLuna
Pro-Ject Audio Systems
PSB
RAAL-requisite
RME
Roon Labs
Rupert Neve Designs
sBooster
Schiit Audio
Sennheiser
Soekris Audio
Soundcore
Spirit Torino
The Source AV
Upscale Audio
Vision Ears
Viva Audio
VZR Audio
Warwick Acoustics
Wells Audio
Woo Audio
ZMFheadphones

Edit: Musicteck has also confirmed to me he’ll be there
Yeah, just hope their family emergency will not affect SoCal events
 
Aug 3, 2022 at 1:04 AM Post #233 of 348
Was that the one that was 3D printed with a half-white shell and stem?
The xMEMS, yes.

I saw it but didn't realise it was quad BA. We talked more about the short stem and how that improves fit and isolation... As well as the thicker cable.
I didn't notice/realise it had a thicker cable! But yes, quad driver and to my ears an amazingly open and clean sound, even compared to other etys, even compared to Evo. I just loved it.
 
Aug 3, 2022 at 3:26 AM Post #234 of 348
xMEMS:
MEMS showed off a new transducer technology at Canjam, and I am incredibly excited to see what manufacturers do with it in the near future.
It is a silicon based design, which allows for unparalleled unit-to-unit variation, and also a more precise degree of tuning ability than in other drivers.
It does have the downside of not being able to be powered with a typical amp and must be 'active', so it's more likely we'll see this either in active headphones like TWS IEMs or in active monitors, but the 3d printed demo unit they had at the show was not just 'good', but surprisingly excellent. A touch bright on that particular unit but with performance in almost all other areas including lowend extension, separation of elements in the mix, resolution and imaging, that competed with some very high end IEMs.
This is seriously cool tech and once in a more 'thorough' final product design, it could be honestly quite incredible.
I was fascinated by the possible applications for this too! I immediately thought of staging in headphones. Needless to say that: https://www.usound.com/product/taygete/

Miles
 
Aug 3, 2022 at 8:30 AM Post #235 of 348
Some casual candids at the show, I was only there for Saturday sadly - but was great fun! I was mostly at the Elise Audio stand - some top guys there.

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Those are some quality shots 😍.

It was an incredible show. Thanks a ton to everyone who visited us, we hope you all had fun!
 
Aug 3, 2022 at 12:47 PM Post #237 of 348
Aug 3, 2022 at 12:53 PM Post #238 of 348
Canjam London was an absolute blast this year and I cannot wait for next year (and for SoCal in September!!).
Thank you so much to everyone involved in organising the event for making this happen.

So, some impressions! I'll have a video out hopefully soonish but wanted to get some written ones down immediately.
I also wanted to say a big thank you to https://headphones.com for lending me the DCA stealth for the show to use as an evaluation can. It's pretty perfect given the level of technical ability in various areas, the harman tuning, the isolation (especially important at shows), and also the fact that they are quite hard to drive and respond very well to more powerful amps. It was a great help for comparing stuff at the show.

As to other stuff I had with me:

Headphones: DCA Stealth
IEM Source: Chord Mojo 2
Digital Source: Samsung S22 Ultra (USB Audio Player Pro for bitperfect playback)


ZÄHL HM1:
The HM1 I first tried back in Munich, and at the time I heard the DCA Stealth and Abyss Diana TC. It was by far the best I had heard the stealth, with the most dynamic, controlled and overall excellent presentation compared to all other amps, including the Enleum 23R and Phonitor Xe that were next to it. Before hearing them on the HM1, I was not really a fan of the stealth, but this amp changed my view completely.

At London, RME was demoing the HM1 with the HEDDphone, which unfortunately is not ideal for me as it does not fit my head. The HEDDphone only covers 3/4 of my ears and so I can't get a proper seal or get a real evaluation of it. I hope in future they release a version with a bigger headband for people with massive noggins like myself as the (unreliable) impression I got when listening was good but I did not spend much time with it as until there is a larger headband I could never properly use one anyway.

BUT, I did have the Stealth with me, and also was able to steal a pair of Susvara (thank you Mark!) and a pair of CA1A (thank you Danny!) to try out on the HM1. As well as the T60 Argons that @skedra brought to the show.

The Susvara were the ones I was most excited to try as they are notoriously hard to drive properly, and they can sound a bit soft when not on a particularly beefy amp. To the extent that many owners (including myself) actually run them on speaker amplifiers.
The HM1 exhibited absolute control over the drivers, with fantastic extension, force and impact, and all the while sounding as if it was doing so effortlessly.
It was expansive, with excellent resolution and coherence, and whilst presenting an incredibly transparent and open sound, did so without a hint of glare or aggression.
I cannot wait to spend some time with an HM1 at home.

A standout aspect of the HM1 is just how dynamic it sounds. Not in an exaggerated way, but it just feels as if it lifts any restriction from your headphone.
The Dan Clark Stealth was the best example of this, as it in my experience changes in response to power even more than the Susvara does. Put it on a Mojo 2 and it'll get loud enough without issue but sounds flat and lacking significantly in dynamic impact. Almost lifeless.
Put it on a GS-X mini and now it's sounding better. But put it on an AHB2 and suddenly you're getting the Slam that was missing before. The HM1 rivals and honestly possibly beats the AHB2 in this aspect, and manages to do so without at all coming across aggressive or fatiguing.

The other enticing features of the HM1 are in the tweaks you can apply to the sound. There is the basic bass/treble EQ and L/R balance adjustment which is always nice to have, but the two that are quite unique are the ability to turn the feedback on or off, and the stereo base adjustment.

The feedback toggle means you can run this as a full class A, no feedback amp if you want a warmer and arguably more holographic sound akin to a bakoon AMP-13R, or turn it on and have it as a still full class A but excellently measuring source if you prefer the more neutral (and objectively 'correct') sound.
With the feedback on, the amp measures at the limit of the audio precision analyzer that Zahl currently have. So the true measured performance may actually be better than the listed specs. I'll find out once I get a chance to test it at home.

But the second feature, and my particular favourite, is the 'Stereo Base Adjustment'.
This is NOT just a normal feedback circuit. This is an analog domain mid-side comparator, which looks at what the differences between the L/R channels are vs what is similar, and ONLY amplifies the differences. Meaning as you adjust it, you literally shrink and expand the soundstage. It's quite remarkable.


Blue Hawaii SE, Hifiman Shangri-La SR, Stax X9000:
BHSE:
Impressions on this will have to be very brief as the only other electrostatic energizer was across the hall and it was not possible to AB, but what I can say is that I MUCH preferred this to the Shangri-La energizer (it seems a fair few others found the same), and from memory, the X9000 sounded considerably better on this than they did on the T8000.
On the T8000 the X9000 were very good, but a bit too intimate. On the BHSE they staged considerably better, were seemingly more resolving (though this is not particularly reliable when comparing so far apart), and had an overall more transparent presentation compared to the warmer and softer one of the T8000.

I'm very thankful that on the Saturday night I was given the opportunity to listen to the X9000 and Shangri-La SR on the BHSE in a quiet environment, and this allowed me to get a much better evaluation than during the event when it was busy. Thank you VERY much Makiah for this!
Stax X9000:
I'd heard the X9000 twice before, once in the UK, and once in Munich, though both were on the T8000 energizer.
I had very good impressions of them, but found them to be slightly too warm and surprisingly not as resolving as I expected. I liked them, but thought that Susvara on a good amplifier was an overall better headphone.
That changed once I heard them on the BHSE. They were considerably more resolving, the veil was lifted and they sounded considerably more airy, spacious and with better layering capability.
I've mentioned dynamics a few times in this post already, but must do so again as that has typically been a weak point of many estats. They can be incredibly detailed, quick, and the initial leading edge of macrodynamics is there, but then....not much. No body or boom to drums, perhaps lacking the thunderous weight to organs or deeper brass instruments, and sounding overall quite ethereal and light.
I owned the Stax lambda signature previously and sold them for this reason, and didn't get on with the 009 or any current production stax for the same issues were present.
But the X9000 does NOT have that problem. The lowend is excellent, still not the most impactful headphone around but leagues ahead of previous estats I'd tried.
The timbre is simply beautiful, which when combined with the spatial presentation ability of the X9000 led to a beautiful experience listening to the 'Mingus Medley' by the Windmill Saxophone Quartet.
The X9000 is not just a mild improvement over previous Stax, it's a huge leap and I can't wait to hear it on the LTA Z10E in September.

Hifiman Shangri-La Sr:
The Shangri-La Sr was present at two booths during Canjam. One from Hifonix, running on Hifiman's own energizer, and also at the Headamp booth on the BHSE.
Now as mentioned, I much preferred it on the BHSE, so am basing my impressions on that chain, but my comparisons to the X9000 remain valid for both sources as both headphones were present at each booth.
The Shangri-La Sr was more resolving than the X9000, and also had a larger soundstage. In fact one of the biggest soundstages I have heard on a headphone.
The tuning was overall more neutral than the X9000 (as the X9000 is slightly warm), but not vastly different.
But what held it back for me was timbre, and this was a surprise given how excellent their flagship planar the Susvara is in this regard.
The Susvara still holds the crown for me in the 'just forget you're wearing headphones' department, with the X9000 not far behind and only because I find it slightly warmer than what would be real but totally understand why some would prefer it. (At present I consider the Susvara and X9000 pretty much equal overall, just different).
But the SL-SR seemed as though it was TRYING to impress with the detail and spaciousness and came across a bit contrived as a result.
When AB'ing with the X9000, it was more dry, less lifelike, and so despite the better resolving capability, I found myself overall preferring the X9000 and given the choice between the two that's what I'd go for.
The resolution is nice but can be forgotten after a few minutes of listening. Instruments just being too dry and lacking the body that they should have is not something that can be overcome with 'brain burnin' and that was a shame.
I'm glad I got to try them at last though.


RAAL CA-1A:
Oh boy....these are exciting!
The SR1A (now the SR1B after some slight revisions to the build) were a very interesting headphone, and one I enjoyed, but only for certain genres. It excelled in timbre and classical music was truly beautiful, but anything requiring significant low-end content or an overall heavier presentation didn't do so well.
The CA-1A though, is simply an excellently well-rounded headphone, with resolution exceeding headphones at twice its price, and honestly not falling back in almost any area other than requiring some quite serious amplification.
The tuning of these headphones seems to be very close to neutral, with perhaps a slight lower treble lift.
And for those worrying whether a ribbon headphone can deliver sufficient low-end, don't, these things have it, and they SLAM. In fact, with the 'doughnut' sealed pads, there is actually too much low-end in my opinion. The slotted 'coffee bean' pads deliver a better presentation and keep things neutral.
At $2500, these make a lot of headphones honestly somewhat redundant and I've no doubt we'll be seeing numerous VERY positive reviews of the CA-1A soon.
The resolution is incredible, the soundstage is huge, the imaging is laser precise, the tuning is well crafted and the comfort is fantastic too.
Honestly the only fault I could find with these is that whilst you can now run these and the SR1B on regular headphone amps thanks to the new TI-1B adapter, you need one that can deliver a couple watts constantly, with good thermal dissipation capability.
On the HM1 though, well, I think my friend Armand's face sort of says it all:




Subtonic Storm:
I was a huge fan of the Symphonium Helios (made in collaboration with Subtonic) and so the storm were some IEMs I was particularly excited to try out.


I only spent a short time with them, but what I heard was the biggest soundstage I'd experienced in any IEM. Coupled with some top tier technical performance and a tuning that seemed closer to neutral than the Helios, with less of a subbass focus, but a pleasant warmth that did not go so far as to colour things or make them genre picky.
I had a smile on my face the whole time listening to these....
I can't give much more feedback until I hear them for a longer duration though.


xMEMS:
MEMS showed off a new transducer technology at Canjam, and I am incredibly excited to see what manufacturers do with it in the near future.
It is a silicon based design, which allows for unparalleled unit-to-unit variation, and also a more precise degree of tuning ability than in other drivers.
It does have the downside of not being able to be powered with a typical amp and must be 'active', so it's more likely we'll see this either in active headphones like TWS IEMs or in active monitors, but the 3d printed demo unit they had at the show was not just 'good', but surprisingly excellent. A touch bright on that particular unit but with performance in almost all other areas including lowend extension, separation of elements in the mix, resolution and imaging, that competed with some very high end IEMs.
This is seriously cool tech and once in a more 'thorough' final product design, it could be honestly quite incredible.

Wrapup:
There are FAR more products that I was able to try at Canjam, but I just wanted to share a few highlights in this post.
For me though the best part of these events is always the social aspect. Getting to spend time with friends old any new, going to cool places after the show, and I cannot wait until next year. I had an absolute blast!



Great impressions, man. Thanks.


1) Debut to e-stats and going all in
Some of you may know that I write for TechPowerUp in the Headphones and Audio categories, among other things, for the last year or so. I've been a predominantly dynamic driver over-ear headphones guy most of my life before trying out IEMs and planar headphones of various types, and have been lucky to experience some of the very best in the planar world today that better matched my music preferences too. But there still was a question remaining about whether electrostatic headphones would be my true end game (if there is one), and I was even offered a few different e-stats to try out and review. I went in to CanJam aiming to get my first e-stat experience after having already talked a bit with Audeze, Hifiman, and a couple of other headphone and amp makers, and that led to this:



After numerous hours with three Audeze CRBNs, the Stax SR-X9000 (and bonus Lambda Pro), twoHifiman Shangri-La Srs and a Jade II, as well as sources including the Headamp Blue Hawaii Special Edition, the Eksonic T2, the Stax SRM-700S, and the Hifiman Shangri-La Sr. amp, I made a decision and got in touch with Headamp. Thanks to both @Makiah S and @justin w. I went back home with that very BHSE above and then Hifiman loaned me the available Shangri-La Sr. headphones to take with it. This will be a fun weekend coming up, and now I am prepped for e-stat headphone reviews too!

2) Get exposure to more high end gear
Given my relatively recent entry to the >$500 world of headphones (outside of the Sennheiser HD820 I bought and sold quickly), I wanted to listen to more of the higher end stuff that these shows are really useful for. This included headphones from the likes of Abyss, Dan Clark Audio, Focal, Meze, and Spirit Torino in addition to sources from Chord, dCS, Caying, Zahl, and many more. There were also true flagship IEMs from Noble, Vision Ears, 64 Audio, JH Audio, MMR/Jomo Audio, and a few one-off units from brands including Elysian Acoustic Labs and Subtonic in addition to those I've already heard, and this was a lot of fun too. I wanted to see more participation from vendors and more suites too, although DCS came in handy here. Some of my pre-conceptions were thrown away after this weekend, including how well planars can sound off full tube amplifiers too! The Hifiman Susvara off the Feliks Audio Envy in particular was a combination I will keep thinking about, and this is coming from the guy who ran his Susvara demo unit off the Hifiman EF1000 for months too. In general I also felt more likely to pony up the cash for expensive headphones and desktop sources rather than expensive IEMs and DAPs given how quickly the portable market is evolving and a sense of FOMO/feature of the month attached to it.



3) Meet people and get to know others
Arguably the most important thing achieved whereby I had faces now to associate with names and email addresses, and also was able to meet many others who partake in this hobby. Some are extremely charismatic (Danny from RAAL-requisite and Mark from HiFiMAN come to mind immediately) whereas others didn't let language barriers get in the way of nerding out on driver composition in headphones/IEMs and electrical circuitry in sources. Likewise, the Head-Fi crew did a great job I thought and chatting to them also provided insight on how guys with years/decades of experience still relate to their guilty pleasures despite having access to basically everything. @jude in particular is way more chill in person than I thought he would be too, and I'll have to look for that Asha Bhosle recording of Ave Maria because of you!

4) Some other things that left a lasting impression
In no particular order:
  • HiFiMAN for introducing a new closed-back that sounds remarkably similar to its open-back twin
  • Campfire Audio Supermoon for a slammy balance
  • Audeze for making a unique e-stat set using headphones drivers very special to me
  • Meze 109 Pro for arguably being the best new <$1k set in a while
  • Elysian Acoustic X for showing me what Sonion EST IEM drivers are capable of
  • Subtonic Storm for actually justfying the hype being built around it
  • Elise Audio for being a bunch of music lovers who decided to start a shop to share their love with others
  • Focal Utopia for showing how dynamic drivers can still hang around, if not best the rest
  • InEar Prophile-8 for providing a musical touch without breaking the bank too much
  • Jomo Audio Prototype F for its unique haptics drivers and provided tactility
  • Spirit Torino Twin Pulse and Valkyria Titanium w/binaural choir recordings for an ethereal experience
  • xMEMs proof-of-concept drivers for keeping the nerd in me happy
  • Cayin HA-300MK2 for showing me how tubes are supposed to really sound
  • Zahl HM1 for getting added to my wishlist of parts for easy A/B testing of various things
  • RAAL-requisite SR1b + different pad openings on the RAAL CA-1a for showing me perhaps e-stats aren't the end game either
  • LETSHUOER Conductor for its wacky tuning most people hated and yet many absolutely love
  • Noble Audio for the honest discussions on how smaller brands in the West have to change their working philosophy when competing against ChiFi
  • dCS Audio for creating a pretty cool DAC with interesting filters and crossfeed tech that I'd like to see implemented in more accessible sources
Some random photos to end this post, including the first few from the night before CanJam London even began:






Whoops I hit my 25 images/post limit so these will have to do!
👍🏻👍🏻
 
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Aug 3, 2022 at 1:12 PM Post #240 of 348
Thanks @MasterZen !
That’s not what I wanted to hear 😂
I’m considering the Q2 Monochrom from months 🙄
Worth it if you are happy with 28mm! Extra benefit of macro mode, be handy for taking photos of iems and headphones 🤪
 

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