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Thread: Sennheiser's

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  1. #1
    Ultimate Freak
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    Dec 2007
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    tbh am sick of cables and shit with the sennheisers ****in up, ive always got them and ive had to replace alot of shit with them

    my first pair i ever bought was the sony mdr-v600 but now they do the v700. Only thing i didint like with them was that the ear cup part was a bit flimsy but im sure i read that with the v700 they had sorted that

    also just noticed these

    MDR-XB700 (MDRXB700) : Overview : Headphones : Sony

    going to be for the djing and the production

    Going to head to the sony shop the morra and get a test drive of them both

  2. #2
    Junior Freak
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    Quote Originally Posted by ritaheed View Post
    tbh am sick of cables and shit with the sennheisers ****in up, ive always got them and ive had to replace alot of shit with them

    my first pair i ever bought was the sony mdr-v600 but now they do the v700. Only thing i didint like with them was that the ear cup part was a bit flimsy but im sure i read that with the v700 they had sorted that

    also just noticed these

    MDR-XB700 (MDRXB700) : Overview : Headphones : Sony

    going to be for the djing and the production

    Going to head to the sony shop the morra and get a test drive of them both
    Yep Sony are one of the manufacturers I would have said you get a fair deal for your dosh.

    The others are Panasonic (which I've got the RP-HTF350 ones which also come with Technics logo on), they're a bit spacey, but okey. Under 20 squid iirc, which you can't argue with.

    JVC do some good budget headphones, the last pair I had were ace imho, really direct sound and nice top end, although bass was a basic lowend 20Hz. I actually prefer them over my Panasonics, but probably personal taste. Good for ~15 quid if you go through headphones like I do :)

    Tbh, the things to looks for are the bandwidth should be ideally below 20Hz and above 20KHz (aparently average human hearing can hear up to 36KHz)

    the response is a bit questionable since you can pretty much get more response with the power you put into the speaker.

    don't get headphones with a elastic band at the top of the head, they nearly always get destroyed with DJing. Although it's not absolutely necessary; look at the ear cup swivel joint, if it seperates on pressure and can be reassembled easily it's good, although I've yet to find a pair like this. Sony MDR-V700DJ which my mate has are very strong on that joint, sound is not too bad on them either.

    There are probably many other manufacterers which do the same competatively priced headphones. I'd go with if they make other audio equipement and that's pretty good, then their headphones should be as good if not better. i.e. Bose?

  3. #3
    Junior Freak
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    Ah before I forget to add to this thread, if you use any headphones with a sound chipset, make sure you've got the line output full wack then use the main volume control to regulate the loudness. Not only does this remove pretty much any noise produced by the op amps, but it also avoids the chipsets which don't have line out mixing being sustituted with software handled amplitude control, it degrades the sample bitrate and you'll get the illusion of faster dynamic response (it sounding louder when it's not).

    Oh and I recommend you disable everything you don't use, like MIC in, CD in, etc. They are guaranteed to pick up line noise.

    Also, although you can't disable it in XP onward (it's OS internal) is to disable any CPU cooling software, I've discovered they add noise.

 

 

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