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- Jun 5, 2003
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Quote:
Congratulaions on the purchase of a child!
Nah, it's actually 115 yrs. old..... (and inanimate)
Congratulaions on the purchase of a child!
I've had mine for a couple of days now. I've had some high-end IEMs - UE11, JH13 - and I have to say I like these a great deal more. I'm not going to try to write a range-by-range, aspect-by-aspect review, I'll just second what others here have written. What I really love about these is how clean and pure they sound. The best BA IEMs I've heard sound a little muffled by comparison. I think they sound great, too, and it certainly wasn't anything that bothered me on its own, but in comparison the MG6PROs just sound crystalline and spacious. They're good enough that for the first time since getting obsessive about portable audio I don't feel the desire for anything better.
They seem pretty forgiving as to gear as well. I'm mostly listening out of a Solo/RX2, but straight out of my Touch they sound great.
One word of warning. They REALLY need to break in. Straight out of the box they sounded really thin and disappointing - the bass was great but everthing else was very ordinary. It only takes a couple of hours to hear a big difference. I've got maybe 30 hours on them now and they continue to improve, but that first step is a big one.
For what it's worth, my impression is that the gap between universal DD IEMs and this custom is smaller than for equivalent BA gear. The jump from, say, a Shure 530 to a JH13 is massive. The only DD universal I've heard is the IE8, and it's closer to this custom than that. It's still a big difference - and more than worth it to me, anyway - but the basic character of the two phones is closer. It's that clarity, for me, which seems to be a basic DD quality.
Dealing with Future Sonics was a pleasure. Totally straightforward and businesslike, less than two weeks start to finish, and the delivery went astray - not their fault - and they got right on it in real time and helped me out. Great people.
Anyway, this one's a winner.
Listening now, and I'm hoping burn in brings out a lot more detail... because it's waaayyyy back there right now! I just switched to the largest open vents, mainly to help the soundstage breathe a bit better, and I think that helped out a little. But they sure are dark sounding on first impression.
Edit-
That's what I need to keep in mind I guess. The drivers are probably stiff and not doing their thing at full range yet. I hope the other aspects besides bass do improve hugely after the first few hours as you've observed. Thanks for your impressions....
Listening now, and I'm hoping burn in brings out a lot more detail... because it's waaayyyy back there right now! I just switched to the largest open vents, mainly to help the soundstage breathe a bit better, and I think that helped out a little. But they sure are dark sounding on first impression.
Edit-
That's what I need to keep in mind I guess. The drivers are probably stiff and not doing their thing at full range yet. I hope the other aspects besides bass do improve hugely after the first few hours as you've observed. Thanks for your impressions....
Well, certainly burn them in, but it's probably not that--it's almost certainly a fit issue. You'll want to play with the fit. I don't know if you ever had the mtpcs, but I guess with many iems, you can get things sitting wrong and it leads to a "speaker in a dark tunnel" sound.
For me, customs felt as though they sat quite superficially in the ear when compared to the deep insertion of many universals.
Do not push them in (no, seriously).
When I first insert (and, when I first had them, often while listening) I pull my customs partway out of ear to make sure I haven't put them in too deeply (remember, do not push)--and let them sit quite superficially to avoid air pressure. The effect, as with universals when done correctly, is that the sound opens, lightens and becomes more detailed. You might want to go back to the vents which have a small opening and spend time getting the hang of customs--it really is it's own thing. If you hear the MG6Pro as congested, then you aren't hearing the MG6Pro. You'll get it with a bit of practice.
I read somewhere in another thread calling the Merlins "dark"??
Uh no, not IMO. That was probably a misapplied term.
Will definitely let them undergo some more burn in......
I have definitely been trying moving them around once inserted in the ears. Pulling them back some did help a bit, but by comparison when I go back to the EX1000's it seems as though a veil has been lifted, and its significantly more transparent and open sounding. I think this is probably a good benchmark for comparisons since you own both as well.
Will keep fiddling with vents, placement in the ears, and such.
If you've got more than a half-dozen hours on them and they still sound like this, it's not burn-in: something else is wrong.
Not quite. The Xcape v.1 needed more than a week and a half to sort out the mids. In fact, I loaned them out w/ a sheen over the mids. When they came back to me the mids were, how shall we say, 'fixed'. It could depend on the model and even the individual unit.
Past 3-4 weeks you definitely should be able to gauge them. That gives you time to sort out your hearing and thoughts beyond considerations like burn-in.