cheapmessiah
Active Member
@Dan Clark could you share your explanation of how smoothing the top end of the FR affects our perception of the kind of headphone we are listening to?
Yes they care !!! LOL… love it!!!Interesting headphone. From a company that cares about frequency response AND design, not just the latter.
I was cracking up when I read Amir's post on the specifications, knowing he just copied and pasted what was published.Yes they care !!! LOL… love it!!!
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Contact us for warranty, we'll take care of you.I've had mine for about 6 months and the left channel is playing with a lower volume for some reason. Changed cable, no difference.. Sigh..
The easiest example is cymbals… live cymbals make a Tangggg sound (not talking some like those with rivets etc). When the high frequency spectrum is super peaky that come off more like a Tsssss.@Dan Clark could you share your explanation of how smoothing the top end of the FR affects our perception of the kind of headphone we are listening to?
@Dan Clark So what would be the best answer to the 2 following questions:
"Why should I buy the Stealth rather than the E3"
"Why should I buy the E3 rather than the Stealth"?
Thanks !
Is clamping force a bit stronger than Stealth?We have already shipped a large order to Germany so they should start being available next week...
Yes, pads are replaceable. We essentially use a "sticker" so they just peel off and replace.
Yes, a little.Is clamping force a bit stronger than Stealth?
For various reasons (mostly financial) I had to sell Stealths, but I don't know how much longer I can resist![]()
Frequency response is as is with no EQ. Above 10 kHz the wavelength gets small enough to get reflections inside the cup, the pinna, etc. so you are bound to get resonances no matter which headphone you test. They are narrow in width and move easily depending on how you wear/measure the headphone so not easy to EQ. You can experiment with broad EQ to taste.I'm not a headphone guy, so please help me out here. First, does graph 2 show FR without equalisation i.e. just plain natural? Second, don't they get kind of messy btwn. 10 and 20 Khz? Looks like quite large peaks and valleys -- or is this normal and expected? Does it in any way affect performance? Thanks for your help.
No, it is the effect of half a decade of research into what makes a good sounding headphone. When the response resembles the dashed line, you can have high confidence that you will like the sound. If not, you can apply a bit of EQ but the response should be close.I has been a long time I wanted to open a post regarding this, but no need, just a comment as we have a fresh newcomer on the scene...
It's really funny to see that, at the time of writing, already 81% of reviewers (46 out of 57 posters) consider the E3 as a "Great (golfing panther) " ;-)
I am just wondering how they can rate it without having listen the device ! @amirm effect?
When the response resembles the dashed line, you can have high confidence that you will like the sound.
If not, you can apply a bit of EQ but the response should be close.