JH Audio - Sharona - Discussion and Impressions Thread
Nov 3, 2022 at 2:55 PM Post #301 of 534
It's official! Now through Nov. 30. (I would call it Black November :dt880smile:)
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Nov 5, 2022 at 7:47 PM Post #302 of 534
Silly question: I have twag 2 pin silver cables for a pair of JH16 I purchased in 2017 with RSA balanced connector feeding an RSA SR71B amp. Can use the same 2 pin cables on the Sharona?
 
Nov 6, 2022 at 12:52 AM Post #303 of 534
Silly question: I have twag 2 pin silver cables for a pair of JH16 I purchased in 2017 with RSA balanced connector feeding an RSA SR71B amp. Can use the same 2 pin cables on the Sharona?
No, the Sharona used recessed IPX connectors. There’s a slight chance you could request JH to build yours with a 2-pin socket, though. You could e-mail them and ask.
 
Nov 6, 2022 at 3:35 AM Post #304 of 534
I'm actually confused, the website has 2 pin, 4 pin and 7 pin cable selection for Sharona.
So is the 2 pin the standard 2 pin like most CIEMs?

T2 (IPX) is not a selection there.

The Sharona in the Black Friday banner also seems to be using a standard 2pin cable and not the T2 one.
 
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Nov 6, 2022 at 9:29 AM Post #305 of 534
I'm actually confused, the website has 2 pin, 4 pin and 7 pin cable selection for Sharona.
So is the 2 pin the standard 2 pin like most CIEMs?

T2 (IPX) is not a selection there.

The Sharona in the Black Friday banner also seems to be using a standard 2pin cable and not the T2 one.
Yes the 2pin should be the standard like most iems. That's interesting though, when I ordered the Sharona back in June the cable options were T2 (which I got) 7pin and 4pin. Now it looks like they did away with the T2 and replaced it with the regular 2pin on their iem designer.
 
Nov 6, 2022 at 9:45 AM Post #306 of 534
Stock should be:

T2 - Artist
2Pin - general public
7Pin - special for an extra as off the site.
 
Nov 6, 2022 at 9:58 AM Post #307 of 534
I'll gladly have 2pin rather than the T2 as it will be another different connector type in my IEM collection.
I think the demo unit is still unavailable from the dealers in SIngapore.
 
Nov 7, 2022 at 3:01 PM Post #309 of 534
I get this error and I am an individual. Not sure why. “Coupon "Black Friday 2022" may only be applied to Individual customer groups.”
 
Nov 9, 2022 at 8:15 PM Post #312 of 534
Just placed an order for Sharona to take advantage of the Black Friday sale.
Any suggestions for aftermarket cables?
I already have a Moon Audio Black Dragon v2 for my Angie.
Thanks!
 
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Nov 17, 2022 at 2:56 PM Post #313 of 534
Nov 24, 2022 at 5:39 AM Post #314 of 534
Wouldn't this be nice... :p

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Trying to resist…
 
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Nov 29, 2022 at 5:10 AM Post #315 of 534
I am so glad I went down the thread from the top and read your superb "review draft" @Deezel177, already was quite intringued by Sharona and trying to dissuade myself to jump for it as it's not reasonable... I am so close to the edge of taking that BF deal now :p

Thanks!

Hello, everyone! 'Cross-posting over from the Watercooler IEM thread are my 3-day impressions of JH Audio's brand-new flagship Sharona. I've put them through listening tests, drumming sessions and a few hours behind the mixing console, and here are my thoughts so far. :wink:

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The Sharona is, in many ways, a spiritual successor to JH’s flagship Layla. It’s an in-ear tuned with a similar end-goal; to present music with the nonchalance, distance and ease of studio monitors. This is perceivable first-and-foremost in its transients. The Sharona is not an in-ear that beautifies, or contrasts, or crisps up, nor is it a monitor with a ton of sharp edges. Instruments aren’t brightened more than they absolutely need to be, and they may be positioned - depending on the track, which we’ll get into later - up to two-or-three rows out from the audience. It’s a monitor that’s overall relaxed, aside from a healthy low-end bump (again, later), and it wouldn’t be out-of-line to call it warm or ever-so-slightly dark.

The reason why it doesn’t quite fit in those camps is because, despite the Sharona’s shier cuts, it is a surprisingly defined, precise-sounding in-ear. The borders between notes are clear, and so are the lines that lift them off the backdrop. It’s all impressively clean for a monitor that doesn’t attempt to tizz or tazz at every opportunity. That’s down to the new Knowles RAU supertweeters, which have given the Sharona about as much top-end extension as an IEM could get. While the Layla, despite its admirable reach, would taper ever-so-slightly at the very end, the Sharona easily crosses that proverbial finish line. It’s got a backdrop that’s, again, as clean and stable as possible. So, despite cymbals and hi-hats sitting further back in the mix, they’re still absolutely there. The question becomes not whether it can resolve those little nuances, because it certainly can, but how much effort the listener can tolerate picking them out. That’s what surveyors of the IEM will have to ask themselves.

That improved definition and precision is what separates it most from the Layla, to my ears. By comparison, JH’s previous flagship will come off fuzzier; instruments ever-so-slightly overlapping, then warm air sneaking in between. The Sharona is much tighter-sounding with stronger holography and left-right separation. And, its soundstage (with appropriately-vast material) is outstanding. I haven’t heard stuff like the Jewel or DC Ti yet, but this one’s definitely up there from what I have heard. The treble tuning is much more linear too; smoothing the Layla’s sometimes-metallic resonant peak, then extending the highs without lifting them to, say, the Jolene’s quantity. Notes are, again, much better-defined, so you’ll basically hear a cleaner-cut, better-resolved, more three-dimensional sound overall against the Layla. The technical leap is stark, to say the least.

This is especially true of the mids, which, despite having a similar tone to the Layla’s, are now much more open, dynamic and defined because of all the changes going on around it. Textures and colors come through much more apparently, and, from a professional’s POV, they’re a lot more source-sensitive too. Going from one track to the next, it’s obvious when, say, track A has a louder lead instrument than track B. On an ensemble arrangement like Snarky Puppy’s Trinity, you can hear the difference in levels and dynamics between the guitar solo, the ad libs, the sax solo, etc. It feeds into the in-ear’s track sensitivity as a whole, which we’ll get into later. As far as the high-mids go, they’ve definitely benefitted from how the rest of the FR’s been jiggled around too. The low-mids don’t cast as much of a shadow on them as the Layla’s do, and the low-to-mid-treble isn’t as far ahead of them either. So, they will get a bigger share of the spotlight in a bigger venue; more so than JH’s in-ears have been able to afford in the past.

Down low is where I feel the Sharona’s most interesting. it’s obviously been tuned with a hefty low-end boost, comparable (at the sub-bass) to about 2-or-3 o’clock on the Layla. Kicks slam hard, and it’s knocking on DD’s door for me. But, I also am not the pickiest when it comes to woofers either, so YMMV. What makes it intriguing to me, though, is how reminiscent it is of a subwoofer in a control room, instead of speakers in an ear canal. My best attempt at describing it is, rather than tight, close-fisted punches, bass notes hit you like open-hand slaps; strong ones. The impacts are a bit spread-out. Then, they disperse cleanly and outwardly (radially) - yet, not too quickly - into the air, so no smoke trails obscure the rest of the FR. It’s a specific presentation that’ll come down to taste, but I’ve personally taken a real liking to it, because of how much it reminds me of listening to the subs in my uncle’s studio. One could see it as an alternate way-in to the territory that DDs have dominated for so long, but with the lightness and agility that only a pack of BAs could pull off.

The tone of the low-end itself should appeal to the majority of DD-heads here. The muscle starts immediately at the sub-bass, which gives it that subwoofer physicality. Then, it’s a steady, linear drop all the way to the lower-mids, so it doesn’t have the mid-bass issue I had with the Jolene, and it’s why it has a meaty, dense sound overall. Again, though, it doesn’t completely cross over to dark or rich territory to me, simply because of how extended that treble is, and how much extra fat or smoke it’s able to mitigate. I can say with confidence, though, that kick drums and toms will sit in front of cymbals and snare crackles about 80% the time, so keep that in mind if you aren’t keen on lots of lows.

Now, I’ve mentioned track sensitivity and source sensitivity numerous times, and it’s because it’s a fairly major aspect of the Sharona’s final sound. On a more compressed track like Dirty Loops’ Rock You, you can hear how tightly-packed it is. The lows struggle to find a place they can sit without stepping on any toes, the mids are kinda stuck dynamically, and the top-end can barely shine amongst it all. Then, each one of those loud rock you! ad libs feels like a punch to the ear drum. Then, like on the EE ODIN, the track overall will look like a meek ball in the middle of the soundscape; the space around it empty and/or unused.

But, play a record like Oz Noy and Ozone Squeeze’s self-titled album, and suddenly you get lots of height and width. The lead vocals move back-and-forth and breathe, and every element jives together without pushing each other down. So, it is one of those in-ears you can get the wrong impression of if you don’t test it with a wide array of music. It can feel as vast, open and elegant, as it can seem small, overwhelmed and dull.

As a little addendum, I also want to talk briefly about JH’s decision to go with IPX connectors this time around. Personally, I love the standard, and it (or JH’s 7-pin) would probably get my vote to replace 2-pin; purely from an ease-and-durability POV. It’s worth noting, though, the IPX sockets the Sharona has are recessed. So, say, the IPX plugs from Effect’s ConX set won’t work on these IEMs, and I’m not aware of any cable brands that offer these plugs either. The safest bet for balanced use would be the balanced cables that JH themselves sell, or reterminating the stock cable to a balanced connector. It’s a bit unfortunate in that regard, but I am relieved to finally use a JH IEM without a bass pod dangling around all the time. :D

So, that concludes my initial impressions of the JH Audio Sharona. If you’re looking for a Layla 2.0 (with the bass set at 3 o’clock), I think this is as close as you could possibly get. If you want tons of bright, vibrant, bites, this probably won’t be your cup-of-tea. And, if you’re accustomed to all the textural variety that planar, DD and e-stat hybrids have to offer, the Sharona’s all-BA design may lack that extra flavour. But, again, from its unique, control-room-subwoofer lows to its vast, holographic and preternaturally-resolving treble, there’s still tons of new to this in-ear too. I hope that gives you a good-enough picture of what the Sharona sounds like. I’ll start working on the full review in a few weeks, while I finish the couple that are set to launch within that time frame. As always, I hope you guys are all doing well, and I hope you’ve enjoyed. Cheers! :)
 
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