Not so fat head
Headphoneus Supremus
Listening the way the artist intended is hilarious at best….
Thats without question impossible since you won't have the same chain anyway...Listening the way the artist intended is hilarious at best….
There is no player where you can store many EQ profiles for different headphones and where you can easily switch between profiles. Unless you use additional tools such as Sonarworks.Thats without question impossible since you won't have the same chain anyway...
For me not using EQ is a simplification: I don't need to select equipment for supporting certain EQ characteristics and I can freely move my cans around between my sources. I currently use my iPhone, an old iPod Classic, an M17 or a Macbook Air as a source... hardly an environment where I could replicate EQ settings, and even less so considering that I have too many headphones I want to use.
The only logical reason I can find for the newly developed driver to be that bright is it could have been developed with a roadmap for future models to use same driver.Seems like a solution for a problem that shouldnt exist. How is foam getting torn and why use a driver so bright? Assuming foam was torn accidentally under normal circumstances. If the foam was torn when the pads were off then that’s different but still a concern assuming headphones were handled reasonably.
The problem I have is that not all PEQ are created equal. Some noticably degrade the sound, the RME is an exception. So until I can demo it, I won't know. Most people don't use dongles with highly revealing gear, or don't need high dynamic range, so you can't tell from what most people say. With high impediance cans or low sensitivity high current gear (the Susvara is an extreme example) the amp that worked without eq might be clipping with eq.For dongle users that need multiple PEQ settings and even virtual surround (and further DSP features in the future), this is I think the best dongle money can buy at the moment:
https://www.qudelix.com/products/copy-of-qudelix-t71-usb-dac
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I guess you haven’t heard of Roon.There is no player where you can store many EQ profiles for different headphones and where you can easily switch between profiles. Unless you use additional tools such as Sonarworks.
And that certainly doesn't work if you switch between different devices, as you rightly write!
Interesting possibility, yet I don't need EQ anyway and would not pay another subscription for a system I consider much too complex for what I actually want to do.I guess you haven’t heard of Roon.
Have you compared it to the L&P W4?For dongle users that need multiple PEQ settings and even virtual surround (and further DSP features in the future), this is I think the best dongle money can buy at the moment:
https://www.qudelix.com/products/copy-of-qudelix-t71-usb-dac
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I guess you also haven’t read all of the body of work written by Resolve and the contributions made by various Audiologists and other people engaged in sound engineering, recording, producing etc. Yes, I agree that Roon can be overkill for people who do not have a large local library of music and want to seamlessly integrate that library with e.g. Quobuz or Tidal streaming. I just wanted to correct your statement that started with “no player…….” Etc. Roon can do all of the things you said no player can do.Interesting possibility, yet I don't need EQ anyway and would not pay another subscription for a system I consider much too complex for what I actually want to do.
Plus I don't pay for some rather expensive headphone to then correct it via EQ. If it doesn't fit my taste, I prefer to look for another model that does. Thats much more fun to me if I want to play around with gadgets, but nowadays I spend more time listening to music than trying out headphones and DACs.
No, that I did not read. But I do have a background as a live sound engineer and limited background in studio work, so I think I do know how EQ is applied there (and much needed, no question about that). Having studio quality EQ available is an exception at home though (the already mentioned RME products would be fine I guess, some DAW plugins as well) and still much of an overkill. Like Roon.I guess you also haven’t read all of the body of work written by Resolve and the contributions made by various Audiologists and other people engaged in sound engineering, recording, producing etc. Yes, I agree that Roon can be overkill for people who do not have a large local library of music and want to seamlessly integrate that library with e.g. Quobuz or Tidal streaming. I just wanted to correct your statement that started with “no player…….” Etc. Roon can do all of the things you said no player can do.
If you also would take time out to read about the development of the original Raal-Requisite SR1a/b and CA1a, both excellent transducers at their respective price points, you would also learn that there is a completely alternative view to EQ and its uses for TOTL headphones. Alex developed those phones to be the best they could be from a technical point of view at their respective pricepoints knowing that EQ these days is free and is an easy way to tune a headphone to meet each individuals preferences. The alternative would have been to reduce the technical capabilities to try to make the sound more acceptable without EQ. The second of those approaches it seems would have been more acceptable to you, but the first approach is the one that has given us 2 TOTL phones at much lower prices than their direct competitors. Paying more for a headphone doesn’t decrease the need for EQ. In fact it‘s more likely these days to increase the need for EQ so that you can fine tune the sound to perfectly meet YOUR preferences. It’s not possible to produce ONE headphone that will meet the needs of every individual; but it is much easier (for a small number of very skilled individuals) to produce one very technically proficient headphone that can be tuned by EQ to meet the needs of a much larger number of individuals.
I believe this has and will continue to make listeners a lot less tolerant to any imperfections in a recording, warts and all are not acceptable, similar to what air brushing did to the human body....In fact it‘s more likely these days to increase the need for EQ so that you can fine tune the sound to perfectly meet YOUR preferences.
So true, EQ only changes, manipulates the frequencies sent to said headphone, the headphones continue to sound the same just the recording has been altered, and as most EQ is done digitally the stream is no longer bit perfect, if that is a concern.Another thing is EQ doesn't change other driver properties anyway.
We’ve yet to see why AA used a bright driver in all of their models so I doubt AA has a roadmap. I doubt layers of foam bandages is anywhere near an ideal design.The only logical reason I can find for the newly developed driver to be that bright is it could have been developed with a roadmap for future models to use same driver.
We’ve yet to see why AA used a bright driver in all of their models so I doubt AA has a roadmap. I doubt layers of foam bandages is anywhere near an ideal design.