Fantastic cans. Silky sound that lacks a bit in the bass, but for everyday listening they are amazing. Relatively dry sound but not “tinny,” and comfortable enough for me to wear all day. Took a few hundred hours of listening for them to start to break in but well worth the time spent.
I avoid wireless and noise cancelling because they always change the fidelity regardless of how good the circuitry is, and these do a great job of keeping external noise to a minimum. My set came with two cords, one with a iPhone remote and one without. The cord with the remote has a pivoting cable which is cool, but the cord without the remote is a fixed straight connection which is a bit of a bummer. No idea if both cables are still included.
Owned them about two years and loved every minute of use.
I have some Skullcandy Hesh wireless headphones for work. The Hesh has a cable you can add if the battery is low, and that cable has a mic and play/pause switch. For other stuff, Shure SE530’s, worth every penny. I do need to mail them in to Shure to get them replaced do the a cable cracking, hopefully I will get 535’s or can upgrade to 999’s.
I wouldn’t expect much in the way of acoustic quality from those. It looks like a lot the the internal volume is taken up with that headband pass through.
Personally also in the Audio Technica ATH M50X camp. I really like them. The sound is mostly neutral. Not unlike my reference monitors. They have slightly hyped bass which I find quite enjoyable and keeps me from cranking up the volume all the time. Also, the slight bass hype is not at the expense of deep sub which can happen in other cans.
Stylistically, I quite like the clean design. Nothing is sticking out and there’s no crazy bling to them I’d really like a black on black model though. They may seem a bit boring and start to be dated but they may just be due to their popularity.
For functionality, I didn’t think the collapsible design would be all that useful. Seeing my AKGs had lasted years of being thrown in my bag. But it turned out to be super useful as they take up a lot less space that way. They are quite comfy. They do get hot and start pushing on the top of my ears after a while though. But I’ll wear them 4-5hrs a day at times without major discomfort. The removable cables and bundled 3 pack is really neat to. I keep the super long one plugged into my work desktop, the slinky one on my desk at home and the short cable stays in my bag for on the go listening.
I’d recommend these to just about anyone. The price might be a bit higher than their value due to their popularity. But that popularity comes from a solid product that won enthusiasts over mostly through word of mouth.
I love my 7506’s, but as I mentioned I had a hankering for a different set. I was fortunate enough to be gifted a sample pair of Audio Technica ath-msr7 headphones. I was given the brown ones, not black. But hey, they were free, and the brown is growing on me!
They do sound fantastic, and are very comfortable. I don’t know that they are radically better than my 7506’s (for the price difference), but for now they are the shiny new car in the garage.
Just copped a pair of Bose Soundlink on ear wireless headphones. I considered the noise cancelling over the ear model but the noise cancelling feature creates a pressure on my ears I dont care for personally. Plus I like to wear light headphones at the gym. So far pretty impressed with the sound, case, quality, weight, comfort and battery life. I have been listening to music all day at work and the battery is still at 100%. One phone call came in while using the headphones, it announced an incoming call plus the caller. Clarity was impressive even stepping outside the office 50 yds away. Two thumbs from me.
$20 mono price headphones. These things have a bit of a following due to their crazy sound to price ratio. They lean towards being a little base heavy without sounding muffled like beats sometimes do. The detachable cable + ability to fold on 3 axis has saved them from countless accidents.
For a better price option, I use our BOOM Rogues. One of the nice things here is they ship with an optional coiled DJ style cable so you don’t yank your laptop off your desk:
Open tooling is an existing product mold that can be utilized by any person/company that wants to simply slap there logo or license name on it. It is not actually designed really except for slight modifications that might be done to alter the tool/product from another being sold. For example: if you wanted to sell sunglasses but don’t have the time to design them, you can find a manufacturer who probably has several generic tooling styles available for very low price. Thus eliminating the cost involved in creating “new” tooling as well as the need for design (your job).