Kildras
Head-Fier
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2016
- Posts
- 61
- Likes
- 47
I disagree completely.
Pricing is based upon value.
And sound is one crucial factor for a headphone's value. (plus comfort, accessories, brand association etc)
You can't just put up a price tag and expect marketing to market it to be a different product than what range it should be in.
You may fool and trick someone, but the true value will quickly show itself, just look at beats headphone.
You can't market a low grade plastic cup and price it higher than a premium handmade glass product.
Sound is a physical phenomenon, but don't forget it is created by physical hardware with sound quality per cost in mind.
Component, R&D cost, QC etc all adds up to cost and then is priced accordingly with other factors such as competition pricing.
Same thing with camera lens (which I am way more familiar with than headphones).
You can take photos with a cheap lens and a high end lens.
Colour rendering will be up for personally preference.
But sharpness and contrast will very likely be not comparable (although the quality of mid range lens are certainly getting very high quality)
Swap out lens with headphones; colour rendering for subjective sound preference; sharpness and contrast to actual performance indicator like dynamic range etc and basically you will see the pattern.
Mid range product can sound great, high end is another level if you have the equipment for matching and the difference will not be as noticable as jumping from a $1 earbud to a $400 fullsized headphone listening to flac.
Pricing is based upon value.
And sound is one crucial factor for a headphone's value. (plus comfort, accessories, brand association etc)
You can't just put up a price tag and expect marketing to market it to be a different product than what range it should be in.
You may fool and trick someone, but the true value will quickly show itself, just look at beats headphone.
You can't market a low grade plastic cup and price it higher than a premium handmade glass product.
Sound is a physical phenomenon, but don't forget it is created by physical hardware with sound quality per cost in mind.
Component, R&D cost, QC etc all adds up to cost and then is priced accordingly with other factors such as competition pricing.
Same thing with camera lens (which I am way more familiar with than headphones).
You can take photos with a cheap lens and a high end lens.
Colour rendering will be up for personally preference.
But sharpness and contrast will very likely be not comparable (although the quality of mid range lens are certainly getting very high quality)
Swap out lens with headphones; colour rendering for subjective sound preference; sharpness and contrast to actual performance indicator like dynamic range etc and basically you will see the pattern.
Mid range product can sound great, high end is another level if you have the equipment for matching and the difference will not be as noticable as jumping from a $1 earbud to a $400 fullsized headphone listening to flac.