TFTA-2100-2V1S Review
Nov 9, 2011 at 6:17 AM Thread Starter Post #1 of 33
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TFTA-2100-2V1S Review
 
 
Thanks to TFTA.EU for the sample. 
 
First impressions:  Well my first thought is this thing needs a better name because I can’t see any one remembering it.  My second is that these very much are reminiscent of the Denon C751 to look at and I can see a comparison coming.  Actually given some of the crazy stuff I’ve read about these it makes me wonder just what sort of stuff they should be getting compared to.  The box isn’t very inspiring and I’m a touch disappointed that they have no case which I think any £100 IEM ought to.
 
First listen and what instantly strikes me is these are sealed and venting issues, after about 2 minutes I decide that I’m finding a pair of Comply’s as I cannot be arsed getting them to sit just right so I can pull them back out to compare to something as one tends to do when reviewing.  Once you get them sitting right though they are stupid powerful.  Insane!  Looking back at the box to check, nope these aren’t the Extra bass 3V2B ones (seriously rename all of them please) I wonder if they maybe put the wrong ones in the box?  Holy crap these are powerful beasts.  Think JCB meets rocket engine.  Burn in time.
 

 
Source 5G iPod Video line out through a Practical Devices XM5 with LM6171 opp amps, 1G iPod Shuffle with a 75 ohm adapter added and an HM-601
 
Lows:  Power, power and then a little bit more power.  Honestly I can’t think what the extra bass one must be like as these are just a torrent of abundant force.  Oh god they are powerful.  They move a vast amount of air, just gargantuan amounts.  In small doses it’s very much entertaining but I have delicate little ears and these are raucous brawling brutes that feel like they have strapped my hearing to a rocket sled, they just utterly power through anything.  Make no mistake whatsoever, these are bass monsters.  The bass is so tactile and forceful I can see why some have been so awe struck by it.  It really is a force to be reckoned with!  Quality of the bass is superb too and almost miraculously it can go away a bit if asked to.  However if there is the slightest consideration of there being a low end note then it leaps back into action.  It’s very agile and super quick to respond, and oh so achingly powerful.  Honestly its way too much for me but then big bass has never been my thing.  It’s stupid deep and stupidly good at holding a low note, given its massive size it’s remarkably punchy too.  It’s not uber tight but much better than it should be at this quantity.  This may be the ultimate in basshead IEM’s. 
 

 
Mids:  Okay they are very clearly not what’s centre stage but ignoring quantity the quality’s pretty good.  You would expect the mids to get more lost in the sea of bass or suffer with a mid / bass bleed but nope, mids are pretty dark given the dark overall feel of these but tonally you can feel them trying to be a little dry.  Striving and reaching for the dry and light but not really quite making it.  It balances the vocals out and I must say they are lovely.  Of course they are way too far back for my own tastes but they do stay crisp and clear no matter what I tried with them.  They did prefer a dry voice though as the more liquid they go the more the darkness obscures.  Not that it’s likely to matter as if you’re a big Nora Jones listener then you’re probably not buying these anyway.  These are for things like Britney’s “Hold it Against Me” the bass and lows on it with it pulsing rhythm you’ll either love it or hate it.  In my case these things do a fine job of pumping out her warbling but the bass actually made me feel sick.  Holy crap these are scary.
 
Sorry, yes the mids, good for the price and do a fine job of holding their own but they are only ever a supplementary here, if a good one.  They ensure all the lyrics are there if you want to have them but it’s not something for rich swooping vocals.  It’s about getting the job done capably and efficiently.
 

 
Highs:  Good, but I rather think they could have afforded to be less refined and offer up a bit more edge and crispiness.  Taken on their own they are very nice and I’d normally praise their ability to shimmer and decay.  They do stand clear and are easily audible but they are overshadowed in abundance by that mammoth bass.  The highs could do with a bit more bight to be more in line, but maybe that’s how they are supposed to be.  You can’t have 3 super stars on a stage and the treble isn’t what you’ve come to hear.  Its good stuff though, not outstanding, blow you away but good enough to keep up with the better stuff and for the money pretty nice.  It’s not up to IE8 levels of clarity and refinement but surely gives the IE7 a run for its money.  It easily out paces the aging C751 too.  I do like the level of refinement and control they show.  They also have a pretty damn good extension which you don’t often see in this sound signature, very good quality and behaviour just wildly in the shadow of the bass.  That shadow makes these all rather dark and foreboding and it makes it really temping to hit the treble boost button to balance things out a bit.
 

 
Soundstage:  These can sound voluminous but they are closed in, they offer the feeling of being in a closed if biggish room.  Their dark nature doesn’t lend themselves to any sense of air and openness but still they have power and offer a good sense of scale.  Placement is more about distance than good positioning.  This is all what happens when you have a dynamic and close it in.  Instrument separation is pretty good, vocals in particular always being clear and distinct.
 
Fit:  Their closed nature gave me venting issue and driver flex.  If you don’t get the pressure equalised then these sound meh so make sure you get it right and you will be rewarded.  Or you could do what I did and stick on Comply’s but they don’t last very long.  I’m sure they would equalise if you gave a them a minute or two but when reviewing you don’t get to stick them in and leave them for hours, in normal use it should be okay.
 

 
Comfort:  Physically totally fine, I may have been concerned given they are giganto but the C751 are about the same size and they never ever gave me any trouble, turns out these didn’t either.  However they move so much air then actually can make me feel queasy.
 
Cable:  Nice.  It’s pretty good, not blowing me away and not doing anything to make me dislike it.  No complains but nothing amazing either.  Nicely integrated chin slider though.
 
Microphonics:  Not a lot but then I was using Comply’s which helps.  That said if you wear them up and if needs be use the chin slider then you’ll get none.  It’s really up to you but that’s how I would and did wear them.
 

 
Amped/Unamped:  These loved power, the more the better.  They improved markedly with the more power available to them.  At £100 it’s not something than naturally belongs with a good amp but they do scale very well.  Not that they needed volume, the Shuffle with the 75 ohms added could easily make them go too loud but they never mustered the same clarity and detail retrieval that they could when driven with the XM5. Amp them and be rewarded, just don’t really go for a thick or bassy amp, these don’t need leaning in that direction any.
 
Isolation:  Very good for a dynamic.  Of course it has all the corresponding venting issues and what not but if you want isolation then these are rather good.  Maybe not right up and every day on the Tube level but easily enough for most environments.
 

 
Value:  There are coming in at £100 and there is a ton of stuff that sits around that magical round number.  So would I pay that for them?  Hell no.  I know me and these are not to my tastes.  However having seen a couple of people’s reactions to them I can tell you that there are people out there that would pay it and more.  These are crazy stupid bass behemoths; god only knows what the extra bass ones must be like.  Any bass heads out there should be falling over themselves to throw money at TFTA for a pair of these.  So to a bass head, yes these are jolly fine value for money!
 

 
Conclusion:  These do so much so well and bit of me thinks oh wow! Then they begin to move so much air the pressure on my ears makes me a little queasy.  Yes these right now give me that sensation my mouth is about to water up and then I’m going to get to see lunch again.  Oh god there is there is so much energy and power in the bass it’s phenomenal, it goes stupid deep and there is no roll off, absolutely none.  The bass is masterful in its abilities but for the love of god there is too much.   If you are after bass monster then this has got to be on your list, absolutely got to be.  The bass is stunning in its quantity and its control of the enormous volume.  Sure you can etc better bass, cleaner, quicker, tighter even at this price but there is no way you get this good at this quantity.  Holy crap there is a lot of bass and it’s of an excellent quality.  I can really see some adoring this and its dark heavy, overpowering sound.  Everything else it does too is very fine but were largely irrelevant.  This is all about the bass plain and simple, it just happens to have good mids and highs but they are not important. 
 
The TFTA-2100-2V1S (seriously you have to rename these things) is a pretty incredible IEM.  It is by no means perfect, even amped up it’s not up at IE8 levels of clarity particularly in the mids but it’s crazy ass bass is on another level.  The IE8 bass is pretty midbass humpy and does roll off but this thing, it’s vast and has no roll off at all that I can tell.  It’s like being in a small sealed room with a sub cranked up full.  It wasn’t to my tastes but if that’s the sort of stuff that floats your boat then you really ought to give these a try.  They are just crazy stuff.  To call these bass cannons is to overinflate the capabilities of a cannon, this is more akin the guns on a good old fashioned battleship, you know the kind Cher likes to drape herself over when singing to sailors.  Whether you will like it or not I can’t say but I promise it’s certainly impressive in its sheer power.
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 6:17 AM Post #2 of 33
 
TFTA-2100-2V1S Quick Review
 
Thanks to TFTA.EU for the sample.
 
Brief:  Holy crap that’s some bass!
 
Price:  £100
 
Specification:  In-ear Silver Metal Housing, Driver unit 10.0mm, Impedance 16ohms, Rated power input 2mW, Max power input 30mW, Frequency response 20-20,000Hz, Sensitivity 100dB at 1KHz, 1mW, R/L output difference <3dB at 1KHz, 1mW, Distortion <2% at 1KHz, 2mW, Connector 3.5mm stereo plug
 
Accessories:  3 pairs of tips but I believe it is being upped to 5.
 
Build Quality:  Great, metal and shiny and I have nothing at all to fault.
 
Isolation:  Very good for a dynamic.  It’s not quite what I would choose for everyday on the Tube or for a lengthy flight but more than enough to cope with the rigours of day to day use.  Easily enough to get you run over if you aren’t keeping your eyes peeled for death on wheels.
 
Comfort/Fit:  I did have some venting issue and more than a bit of driver flex.  I gave up and used Comply’s which solved the issue.  Time would have I’m sure worked too but I’m impatient.  That aside they were not a problem, very comfortable in use despite their large size.
 
Aesthetics:  I like them.  Aesthetics is always a rather subjective matter but I like their shiny gun metal finish.  It’s pleasing to the eye yet not too bling bling.
 
Sound:  Bass by container ship load.  Hell, bass by the fleet of container ship loads.  The bass is gargantuan.  It’s so vast, so deep, so powerful it’s like being in a small room with a sub cranked all the way up.  Did I say one sub, I meant twelve.  Its quality is pretty faultless so long as you choose not to fault the quantity.  There is just so much, so ungodly much I don’t care that its awesome it can physically move so much air as to make me queasy.  It’s mental!  Mental good or mental bad is entirely for you to decide but it’s not something my delicate little ears would or could live with.  The mids are good, a bit dark and dry which balances it a touch but not really enough.  The highs are pretty impressive, very nicely extended and delicate but don’t really have a much of a bight.  Given the bass the highs somewhat sit in the dark and a bit more edge would have helped them stand out.  Not a bad thing just a sound signature choice. 
 
Value:  If you’re a bass head then these are pretty much what you aspire to.  Stupid depth and power with mesmerizing quantities of low end everything.  If that is what are looking for then you aren’t likely to do better than these.
 
Pro’s:   Pretty, isolate well for a dynamic, it’s a bass deity
 
Con’s:   The phrase “power overwhelming” springs to mind, venting issues, it could make me feel ill.
 
 
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 6:45 AM Post #3 of 33


Quote:
 
Brief:  Holy crap that’s some bass!
 


Guess that sums it all up haha.

Excellent review Mark! You mentioned the isolation is very good for a dynamic, how is it (isolation) compared to the IE8 and FX700? 

 
 
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 6:53 AM Post #5 of 33


Quote:
Guess that sums it all up haha.

Excellent review Mark! You mentioned the isolation is very good for a dynamic, how is it (isolation) compared to the IE8 and FX700? 

 
 



it isolates at practically BA levels, way better than the IE8 and the FX500 (i dont have the FX700)
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 7:29 AM Post #6 of 33
Oh Mark!
You never told me you were getting these! :)
 
Mark:
Sorry I have some things to point out - that I simply can't agree with, on your review.
 
-They are too bassy? These are the same level of bass (maybe a little more pronounced, but nothing shockingly strong vs the 751's or the 710's) Your giving the impression that the 1V's are stupidly bass heavy- they really aren't, yes they have bass, they are not exactly se535's with the lack of ANY bass, but they are overall sounding (if that makes sense) earphones. Unlike their brothers the 1XB's
 
-You have never liked bass, but i struggle to comprehend here: You say the C751's are "on par" so to speak with the TFTA 1V's = How can you think that? The 751's were completely bloated out by bass - their brothers the 710's had more highs/mids, but the 751's I sold them because they HAD no mids/highs
So on that point: Have you really given them time? If so, how long?
 
-Not bringing TFTA down or anything, (these are my favourite IEM's ever), but how is the build quality good or more to the point, how can you class isolation good?
Isolation on these are OK, but not great, even with comply's (TX and TS) - the build quality is OK, but yet again, doesn't compete with the 751 quality, let alone the se535
 
-You wouldn't pay £100 for these? Yet you would pay £220 for MTPC/£185 for MTPG I assume? let alone the price tag of £285 for se535's...
 
Agreed though, that these TFTA's are aimed at basshead's but the impression you give here is that the 1V is way too over-powering, when in reality...I would it was "normal"
 
I would love to make you hear the 1XB's - that would be a fun review :p!
(and yes I know hearing is subjective, but still...)
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 7:57 AM Post #7 of 33
Good review Mark! 
 
@Totally Dubbed: Check out the Impressions & Loaner Tour (TFTA-2100-2V1S) too! Hearing is subjective. 
bigsmile_face.gif
 You're lucky to have found your ultimate IEM.
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 7:58 AM Post #8 of 33


Quote:
Oh Mark!
You never told me you were getting these! :)
 
Mark:
Sorry I have some things to point out - that I simply can't agree with, on your review.
 
-They are too bassy? These are the same level of bass (maybe a little more pronounced, but nothing shockingly strong vs the 751's or the 710's) Your giving the impression that the 1V's are stupidly bass heavy- they really aren't, yes they have bass, they are not exactly se535's with the lack of ANY bass, but they are overall sounding (if that makes sense) earphones. Unlike their brothers the 1XB's
 
-You have never liked bass, but i struggle to comprehend here: You say the C751's are "on par" so to speak with the TFTA 1V's = How can you think that? The 751's were completely bloated out by bass - their brothers the 710's had more highs/mids, but the 751's I sold them because they HAD no mids/highs
So on that point: Have you really given them time? If so, how long?
 
-Not bringing TFTA down or anything, (these are my favourite IEM's ever), but how is the build quality good or more to the point, how can you class isolation good?
Isolation on these are OK, but not great, even with comply's (TX and TS) - the build quality is OK, but yet again, doesn't compete with the 751 quality, let alone the se535
 
-You wouldn't pay £100 for these? Yet you would pay £220 for MTPC/£185 for MTPG I assume? let alone the price tag of £285 for se535's...
 
Agreed though, that these TFTA's are aimed at basshead's but the impression you give here is that the 1V is way too over-powering, when in reality...I would it was "normal"
 
I would love to make you hear the 1XB's - that would be a fun review :p!
(and yes I know hearing is subjective, but still...)


too bassy is always a subjective issue and as such its not a fault but for me they were much too bassy much like mars bars are much too sweet.  its a preference thing.
 
the 751 was something that really needed a bit of power to come alive so maybe thats why we rate them differently but all our ears, sources tips used can all work out differently and no one really hears everything exactly like anyone else.  thats why i always say what source ive used as i can only go by what ive heard.
 
when i say i would pay £100 i mean because i found the bass so powerful that my preferences would be something lighter, this is in big part about the quantity of bass than going for balance or detail retrieval.  those i things i place higher value on.  so i wouldnt pay that for them, im not saying they are not worth they money.
 
oh i wouldnt pay what the MTPC go for, i think they are much overpriced in the UK.
 
Bass quantity is something we have always differed on, you like lots i dont and thats why companys make a range of things otherwise the RE-0 would the only IEM in the world.  choice and personal preference is key to most things.
 
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 8:08 AM Post #9 of 33


Quote:
Good review Mark! 
 
@Totally Dubbed: Check out the Impressions & Loaner Tour (TFTA-2100-2V1S) too! Hearing is subjective. 
bigsmile_face.gif
 You're lucky to have found your ultimate IEM.


 
Just lol'ed at the review, sorry
Over-hyped for the TFTA's?
Take a look at the ie8's on these forums & the RE-0's, and more so the se535's...


Quote:
too bassy is always a subjective issue and as such its not a fault but for me they were much too bassy much like mars bars are much too sweet.  its a preference thing.
 
the 751 was something that really needed a bit of power to come alive so maybe thats why we rate them differently but all our ears, sources tips used can all work out differently and no one really hears everything exactly like anyone else.  thats why i always say what source ive used as i can only go by what ive heard.
 
when i say i would pay £100 i mean because i found the bass so powerful that my preferences would be something lighter, this is in big part about the quantity of bass than going for balance or detail retrieval.  those i things i place higher value on.  so i wouldnt pay that for them, im not saying they are not worth they money.
 
oh i wouldnt pay what the MTPC go for, i think they are much overpriced in the UK.
 
Bass quantity is something we have always differed on, you like lots i dont and thats why companys make a range of things otherwise the RE-0 would the only IEM in the world.  choice and personal preference is key to most things.
 


Ok about the price thing - although you made it seem/still make it seem that you wouldn't pay for them as they aren't worth it.
However, 751's mate...they really didn't have much mids/highs
 
 
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 8:22 AM Post #10 of 33
Oh Mark, how do the 1V's compare to the IE7's? Could you go into more detail/comparison about the two?
I will be getting my IE7's in soon 
 
And more so, for you, how do the IE7's compare to the IE8's?
 
(I'm looking a lot into the bass impact all 3 have)
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 8:47 AM Post #11 of 33


Quote:
Oh Mark, how do the 1V's compare to the IE7's? Could you go into more detail/comparison about the two?
I will be getting my IE7's in soon 
 
And more so, for you, how do the IE7's compare to the IE8's?
 
(I'm looking a lot into the bass impact all 3 have)



the 7 is much more about smooth, a little soft, lush yummyness.  its not hard hiting, its aimed at a relaxed something you could listen to all day and not tire you out. the 8 is harder hitting punchy and exciting but very detailed.  the 7 in comparison has that sennheiser veil that makes details not obvious at first.  the 1V is big, pretty punchy and vast.  tonally its in between the 2 as the 7 is lush and 8 somewhat dry.
 
honestly i cant see you loving it particularly over the TFTA, but thats just a guess.
 
Nov 9, 2011 at 8:57 AM Post #12 of 33


Quote:
the 7 is much more about smooth, a little soft, lush yummyness.  its not hard hiting, its aimed at a relaxed something you could listen to all day and not tire you out. the 8 is harder hitting punchy and exciting but very detailed.  the 7 in comparison has that sennheiser veil that makes details not obvious at first.  the 1V is big, pretty punchy and vast.  tonally its in between the 2 as the 7 is lush and 8 somewhat dry.
 
honestly i cant see you loving it particularly over the TFTA, but thats just a guess.

Only got the ie7's for the hell of it (only £37) - not because I would like them / change earphones, although i want to draw a larger comparison so to speak.
 
We shall see what I make out of the IE7's - but as you say I probably won't be too keen on them.
 
 
 
 
Nov 10, 2011 at 1:22 AM Post #13 of 33
Yes, TFTA's are bass monsters but they do the entire spectrum very well.
I decided to listen to flamenco music and it sounds AMAZING! I have never enjoyed this genre so much in my life!
The strum of guitars, the smooth bass lines, the shakers, everything is just lush, crisp and puuuuuurfect !!!
 

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