bangraman
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2002
- Posts
- 10,305
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- 65
Quote:
[size=xx-small]A1000 left, W1000 centre, W2002 right[/size]
You'll see that with the '3D wing' it's important that the pad swivels fore and aft. With the 'regular wing' not only are the arms quite flexible but absolute flat placement of the pad on the head is not critical.
A1000 features the 3D wing and you can see that the arm is solid, which is why the pad has to articuate.
The W1000 features the 'regular' wing and you can see that the arms are slender in comparison. These bend a bit.
Originally posted by elnero I didn't know there was a difference, I thought all their wing system headphones had "3D Wings". If this is not the case then what headphones do have 3D Wings? Edit: DOH! You edited while I was typing. LOL, oh well I see what you mean now. Thanks! |
[size=xx-small]A1000 left, W1000 centre, W2002 right[/size]
You'll see that with the '3D wing' it's important that the pad swivels fore and aft. With the 'regular wing' not only are the arms quite flexible but absolute flat placement of the pad on the head is not critical.
A1000 features the 3D wing and you can see that the arm is solid, which is why the pad has to articuate.
The W1000 features the 'regular' wing and you can see that the arms are slender in comparison. These bend a bit.