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- Mar 20, 2011
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I don't know what just happened but I lol'd in my head
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I just love the stock stereo in my car. It is a pioneer. Lacking clarity when the windows are down. THAT is the only downfall. Cost me more than USD 1000 just to get to hear than stereo. What do you guys think? Should I rob a bank while listening to rock or jazz? Is this real life? Maybe because the world's supply of oil is diminishing? I woke up this morning to feed my pet cat and then I realized i didn't have any pets. I just walk out and start looking for something which I barely remember what I was looking at. I thought to myself maybe I should listen to it. All hope is lost when I open up my eyes and the alarm clock that I bought yesterday froze. The battery which was Duracell's was the battery that would keep going and going. Arriving at McDonald, I ordered a Chicken McDuluxe. It was delicious and the crunch I heard made me felt sleepy. I went straight to the toilet. I am using SE535 to isolated the nasty bladder noise coming from below. Isolation is great. Better than any CIEM. I really hope that I wasted your time reading this. Can't wait to use SE846 so that I can listen to the car stereo mentioned earlier no more.
I divorced my two wives because they were geeks — fully into gadgets and pretty nerdy stuff. I've always been more into fashion, good taste and all things Hello-magazine (yes, rather classy, if I may add), and that's why I adore my K3003s. I still am a pretty good-looking, though admittedly rather shallow, dude.
That is why my wife and I are a perfect couple...at the same time nerdy, enjoying tech and old school Kungfu movies, incredibly good looking and appreciating Martin Margiella and Comme des Garçons clothing, all this complemented by brilliant minds.
Appreciating or wearing CdG?
Juuuuust wondering if I would be able to spot you at a distance.
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It easier to spot the shiny faceplates of my Miracles
Read something interesting on Rin Choi's first review of a CIEM.
[COLOR=FF0000]"Unless a CIEM manufacturer correctly address the issue, such as by measuring every user's ear canal resonance or via CT scanning, given their internal designs are equal, a CIEM can't possibly compete against an universal in terms of tonal linearity & high frequency extension.
Then what about all the reviews blatantly glorifying the custom in-ear technology? I'd say they are all good SF-horror reads, but I'd rather recommend "at the mountain of madness" by H. P. Lovecraft. You can't go wrong with Cthulhu Mythos!"[/COLOR]
Another reason to believe the SE846 could definitely be special.
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My argument still stands, as it is virtually impossible for a CEIM company to accurately calculate the optimum depth at which the user's reference plane is located- Damper location adjustment only complicates the matter by shifting the bore resonance, not to mention the second bend analogy is only an extremely vague approximation.
So his argument is that an universal IEM has a better reference plane... and assuming that universal has a better reference frame, they would be better tuned. I actually think this argument is completely wrong, because it's the opposite that's also true.
While it's true there's no way for us to know the exact ear canal resonance of every user, a CIEM reduces the variance of that "reference plane" far better than universal IEM. An universal IEM, by the virtue of sitting farther outside of your ear canal than a custom IEM, exacerbates the problem of not having the same acoustic resonance in each individual ear even more so. Then you have even more problem with the sound changing depending on the sleeve and fits of universal.
Again, there's no absolute rule that a CIEM is automatically better than universal by the virtue of it being custom. There are cheap and crappy CIEM as well as there are crappy universal IEM. However, if your value is consistency of performance, then a CIEM is always more consistent than universal, as it will eliminate factors that introduces variance into the process.
It's apt to include the paragraph right before as well:
My argument still stands, as it is virtually impossible for a CEIM company to accurately calculate the optimum depth at which the user's reference plane is located- Damper location adjustment only complicates the matter by shifting the bore resonance, not to mention the second bend analogy is only an extremely vague approximation.
So his argument is that an universal IEM has a better reference plane... and assuming that universal has a better reference frame, they would be better tuned. I actually think this argument is completely wrong, because it's the opposite that's also true.
While it's true there's no way for us to know the exact ear canal resonance of every user, a CIEM reduces the variance of that "reference plane" far better than universal IEM. An universal IEM, by the virtue of sitting farther outside of your ear canal than a custom IEM, exacerbates the problem of not having the same acoustic resonance in each individual ear even more so. Then you have even more problem with the sound changing depending on the sleeve and fits of universal.
Again, there's no absolute rule that a CIEM is automatically better than universal by the virtue of it being custom. There are cheap and crappy CIEM as well as there are crappy universal IEM. However, if your value is consistency of performance, then a CIEM is always more consistent than universal, as it will eliminate factors that introduces variance into the process.
Ah okay, thanks for the information.
Reference plane? What is this? Theory of relativity?
Hahaha.