The honeymoon period is real. It’s definitely lasting longer than when I had the Empyreans (great sound but a little cumbersome to wear). I’m very satisfied with the synergy between Grado and Schiit. Currently on the lookout for a new tube.
I have £600 burning a hole in my pocket after the sale of some of my Sonos speakers that I no longer use much. Do I:
a) Be sensible, and save it towards my holiday later this year
b) spend it on upgrading my car which needs some more go faster stuff fitting to it
c) Consider some Dan Clark Aeon X closed backs (I really need a nice pair of closed back phones)
d) Blow the lot on Invest wisely in a pair of RS2x!!
Hi guys, so I’m looking at a set of headphones, i had a listen to a friend’s grado SR80x’s the other day and i thought they sounded amazing. That was with a Fiio btr5 and just using Spotify. I want to get a set of headphones for myself and he’s got a second hand btr5 that i can buy but I’m wondering if i should upgrade to the SR125x or even the SR225x. I don’t think i can go up as far as the SR325x but the other two are in my price range. I’ll be using Spotify for my music too. Or maybe i should just grab the SR80x’s? Thanks for any help!
Thanks for the replies guys. I've decided to order the SR80x's for now. And when or if i do upgrade i'll go the SR225X's. Seems like most people like those. Looking forward to getting the 80's for now.
So I've been settling in with the 325x for about a week now - things seem to just get better and better with about 30 hours on the clock. The choice to colour sound according to need with pads adds some great versatility but I can't help but want that one pad that does it all but I'm not sure it exists.
So far the stock F pads seem to provide the best balance of tonal properties and technical performance, while the Geekria G cush seem expand the stage but sit the mids further back and take away some of the body in the lower frequencies. Both have their use cases. Comfort isn't great with the stock pads but I'm getting used to them. I've also just taken delivery of the Shipibo pads (service was great and quick delivery).
First impressions of the Shipibo are very positive:
Excellent comfort with the pads sitting around the ear with no pressure points making the 325x the comfiest headphone I've tried, hands down.
As for sound, shipibo claim a bump to bass and a cut to the mids and this is very much what I'm hearing but with loss of treble air. As an example I'm hearing less of the breath-like quality that surrounds the edges of sax notes and these now sound smoother and warmer.
Thankfully it has obliterated issues I was having with some harsher recordings.
Tonally the changes overall make the 325x warmer and more organic but still retains the incisive characteristics of driver (i.e. what I think is a tight attack and decay). In a sense, I think it's lost the metallic twang it has with other pads...
Changes to 'technicalities' are quite dramatic, compared to stock sound stage is compressed in all dimensions with a narrow and less graded L-R transition. It is still out-the-head with its stage but imaging within that takes a hit.
The Grado sound that I've read about may have been changed but I do have a soft spot for a full-bodied signature and I've never been one to index for absolute technical performance, plus the comfort is very hard to pass up. Another tool in the arsenal anyway!