unifutomaki
1000+ Head-Fier
motherly anime waifu
Could also be high school anime waifu
motherly anime waifu
Over time I have found myself using the DX160 more to drive the source rather than the Apple dongle. It's easier to control.Picked up an IEC711 clone and can now take IEM measurements thanks to @antdroid helping with setting it up. Still have a lot to learn about this stuff and measurements in general, but I think it’s a good step forward. Oh yeah, thank god my U12t doesn’t have QC memes!
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Nice! I guess I should get one sooner or later...but I also have no idea on how to do it or where to buy it lol.Picked up an IEC711 clone and can now take IEM measurements thanks to @antdroid helping with setting it up. Still have a lot to learn about this stuff and measurements in general, but I think it’s a good step forward. Oh yeah, thank god my U12t doesn’t have QC memes!
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I have very similar settings to what crin uses (imm-6, vinyl tubing coupler & FFT plot) but I think it is not very reliable above 5khz. Does IEC711 couplers show good accuracy above 5Khz and below 10K?
Well, given people can go on and off about accuracy. I will say this - it's up to youI have very similar settings to what crin uses (imm-6, vinyl tubing coupler & FFT plot) but I think it is not very reliable above 5khz. Does IEC711 couplers show good accuracy above 5Khz and below 10K?
I have very similar settings to what crin uses (imm-6, vinyl tubing coupler & FFT plot) but I think it is not very reliable above 5khz. Does IEC711 couplers show good accuracy above 5Khz and below 10K?
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Sorry for the lack of updates...been mad busy with schoolwork.
Anyways, got a real treat for you guys today - the Periodic Be and Ti. Thanks to @boneburglar for throwing this little tour together. Starting with the packaging, it can be considered fairly, ah, lackluster to say the least. The IEMs themselves arrive in a thin, aluminum can. You know, the kind I can pick up at my local grocery store and probably crumple with my bare hands. The cable is microphonic and flimsy; the IEMs themselves all the more so. There’s no markings for which is Left/Right. Oh, and before I forget, the Be only retails for $299 and the Ti for $199. Normally I wouldn't comment on this stuff, but god dang, this is highway robbery - and we haven't even talked about the sound.
Periodic Be
The overall tonality of the Be can be considered simply bassy and excessively warm. There isn't enough treble presence to balance out the enormous sub-bass shelf, and the upper-midrange dip and rolled off treble exacerbate this trait. As with even most cheap DDs, bass texturing is present; however, the transients are particularly muddy and overlap egregiously on the Be. It’s satisfying in the sense that you’ve scarfed down a McDonald’s Big Mac off the street. Not a fan of this at all, and this is coming from someone who doesn't particularly mind dirty bass.
I took a look at the product page, and found this gem: "Is there a measurement that demonstrates clarity? Yes! A 'waterfall plot' is one of the measurements our team performs when designing transducers, and acoustic systems in general. Our proprietary 10mm Beryllium transducer has insane waterfall plot measurements". I'm not going to pretend to know what that is, and neither do I care, because it clearly doesn't translate to practice. Transient attack is blunted, and overall resolving capability is mediocre. Positional cues and imaging are surprisingly acceptable (likely thanks to that upper-midrange dip) sans the cramped staging.
Really, there's not much for me to take huge issue with. Technical ability is poor, tonality is poor, all this is to say that the Be is pretty average. But for $300? The Be has no business playing with the likes of the Moondrop Blessing 2, much less with those a third of its price. Perhaps put more kindly, the Be is akin to a Jomo Trinity Brass at a tenth of the cost with even worse value proposition.
Score: 3/10
Periodic Titanium
If you thought the Be was bad, think again because the Ti makes it sound downright palatable. You know something is wrong when it literally sounds broken on first listen. Its tonality is characterized by the utmost midrange suckout. Vocals sound distant and hazy, all while managing to be sibilant. No, thank you. Bass texturing is again present, but the bass shelf slopes downward almost instantly. I just so happened to read a review about this IEM that said "It has expertly-balanced mid and sub-bass presentation. There’s little to no bleed into the midrange at all". Well, I guess you can't have bleed if they're both absolutely sucked out, amirite? Then minus a pointless peak at 5kHz that attracts my ire more than anything, it completely rolls off after that point.
And technicalities...you're telling me this thing has technicalities? Well, I'm not hearing it. These things are further behind the Be and then some, if only by virtue of their horrendous tuning. You could pick up a pair of earbuds at your local thrift shop and these would be comparable - if not worse.
Generally with these types of IEMs, I'm able to find at least one thing that stands out. And yeah, the Periodic Ti itself is most definitely the standout here. And not like the BE, no, no. The Be is simply mediocre. The Periodic Ti, on the other hand, has absolutely re-defined my definition of "terrible". The fact that listening to the Be after was almost pleasurable speaks volumes. As such, I award it the much "coveted" 1/10 I've not yet given to any other IEM. The Periodic Ti is a very special IEM indeed.
Score: 1/10
Please, please spare me any comments about how I should’ve done this or done that while listening. I ran these out of the A&K SP1000M (a $2000 dap!) and they sound like garbage. All the burn-in, tip-swapping, and psychoacoustics in the world are neither going to save these IEMs, nor change the fact that they (especially the titanium) graph like butt. They will leave quite the burn on your wallet, though.
Here’s another gem off the Periodic site: “We hope you enjoy our efforts* *(If you do NOT enjoy our efforts, please consult with your local poultry specialist on the most efficient ways to find and thoroughly suck eggs)”.
Well, I appreciate the humor ha. Yeah, sucking was done in more ways than one here - from the product themselves, their frequency responses, and to the accolade of rave reviews I skimmed.
Sorry, this review came out a lot more negative than I was expecting. Can’t say I wasn’t a bit shell-shocked by these atrocities. If you want some more positive reading, you can check out my updated thoughts on the 64 Audio Nio here.
Please, please spare me any comments about how I should’ve done this or done that while listening. I ran these out of the A&K SP1000M (a $2000 dap!) and they sound like garbage. All the burn-in, tip-swapping, and psychoacoustics in the world are neither going to save these IEMs, nor change the fact that they (especially the titanium) graph like butt. They will leave quite the burn on your wallet, though.
Here’s another gem off the Periodic site: “We hope you enjoy our efforts* *(If you do NOT enjoy our efforts, please consult with your local poultry specialist on the most efficient ways to find and thoroughly suck eggs)”.
Well, I appreciate the humor ha. Yeah, sucking was done in more ways than one here - from the product themselves, their frequency responses, and to the accolade of rave reviews I skimmed.
Sorry for the lack of updates...been mad busy with schoolwork.
Anyways, got a real treat for you guys today - the Periodic Be and Ti. Thanks to @boneburglar for throwing this little tour together. Starting with the packaging, it can be considered fairly, ah, lackluster to say the least. The IEMs themselves arrive in a thin, aluminum can. You know, the kind I can pick up at my local grocery store and probably crumple with my bare hands. The cable is microphonic and flimsy; the IEMs themselves all the more so. There’s no markings for which is Left/Right. Oh, and before I forget, the Be only retails for $299 and the Ti for $199. Normally I wouldn't comment on this stuff, but god dang, this is highway robbery - and we haven't even talked about the sound.
Periodic Be
The overall tonality of the Be can be considered simply bassy and excessively warm. There isn't enough treble presence to balance out the enormous sub-bass shelf, and the upper-midrange dip and rolled off treble exacerbate this trait. As with even most cheap DDs, bass texturing is present; however, the transients are particularly muddy and overlap egregiously on the Be. It’s satisfying in the sense that you’ve scarfed down a McDonald’s Big Mac off the street. Not a fan of this at all, and this is coming from someone who doesn't particularly mind dirty bass.
I took a look at the product page, and found this gem: "Is there a measurement that demonstrates clarity? Yes! A 'waterfall plot' is one of the measurements our team performs when designing transducers, and acoustic systems in general. Our proprietary 10mm Beryllium transducer has insane waterfall plot measurements". I'm not going to pretend to know what that is, and neither do I care, because it clearly doesn't translate to practice. Transient attack is blunted, and overall resolving capability is mediocre. Positional cues and imaging are surprisingly acceptable (likely thanks to that upper-midrange dip) sans the cramped staging.
Really, there's not much for me to take huge issue with. Technical ability is poor, tonality is poor, all this is to say that the Be is pretty average. But for $300? The Be has no business playing with with those a third of its price, much less the likes of the Moondrop Blessing 2. Perhaps put more kindly, the Be is akin to a Jomo Trinity Brass at a tenth of the cost with even worse value proposition.
Score: 3/10
Periodic Titanium
If you thought the Be was bad, think again because the Ti makes it sound downright palatable. You know something is wrong when it literally sounds broken on first listen. Its tonality is characterized by the utmost midrange suckout. Vocals sound distant and hazy, all while managing to be sibilant. No, thank you. Bass texturing is again present, but the bass shelf slopes downward almost instantly. I just so happened to read a review about this IEM that said "It has expertly-balanced mid and sub-bass presentation. There’s little to no bleed into the midrange at all". Well, I guess you can't have bleed if they're both absolutely sucked out, amirite? Then minus a pointless peak at 5kHz that attracts my ire more than anything, it completely rolls off after that point.
And technicalities...you're telling me this thing has technicalities? Well, I'm not hearing it. These things are further behind the Be and then some, if only by virtue of their horrendous tuning. You could pick up a pair of earbuds at your local thrift shop and these would be comparable - if not worse.
Generally with these types of IEMs, I'm able to find at least one thing that stands out. And yeah, the Periodic Ti itself is most definitely the standout here. And not like the BE, no, no. The Be is simply mediocre. The Periodic Ti, on the other hand, has absolutely re-defined my definition of "terrible". The fact that listening to the Be after was almost pleasurable speaks volumes. As such, I award it the much "coveted" 1/10 I've not yet given to any other IEM. The Periodic Ti is a very special IEM indeed.
Score: 1/10
Please, please spare me any comments about how I should’ve done this or done that while listening. I ran these out of the A&K SP1000M (a $2000 dap!) and they sound like garbage. All the burn-in, tip-swapping, and psychoacoustics in the world are neither going to save these IEMs, nor change the fact that they (especially the titanium) graph like butt. They will leave quite the burn on your wallet, though.
Here’s another gem off the Periodic site: “We hope you enjoy our efforts* *(If you do NOT enjoy our efforts, please consult with your local poultry specialist on the most efficient ways to find and thoroughly suck eggs)”.
Well, I appreciate the humor ha. Yeah, sucking was done in more ways than one here - from the product themselves, their frequency responses, and to the accolade of rave reviews I skimmed.
Sorry, this review came out a lot more negative than I was expecting. Can’t say I wasn’t a bit shell-shocked by these atrocities. If you want some more positive reading, you can check out my updated thoughts on the 64 Audio Nio here.
Here are crinacle and my graphs on the BE:Those frequency response graphs are crazy! I've heard of a V shaped, but that's like a Vw shape. Love how they managed steep treble roll-off AND giant peaks.