80ohm adapter is way too much, 10-30 ohm is better but even then u need a damping filter on the nozzle.
At this point my three are
- Aur Audio Aure - go to EDC
- P1 Max - When I am in the mid centric mood
- Legato - When I really want to jam to some rap and hip hop
I am thinking aloud.
āhas anybody tried the Tinhifi T2 with CP 240 tips on an ifi/ess dac chipāā¦
+1. If this is how mid-fi sounds or is at least a taste of the higher end, itās time for me to stop playing in the kiddie pool.
That helps. Iām gonna play it cool and keep my powder dry
Everything except 2-8k ish looks better on the bluelover to me than the dt600
Here is a a write up on the Penon 10th for anyone interested
Iām not even sure if this is going to be bold statement or Iām just going to look like a fool/novice but here goes;
Resolution and detail retrieval arenāt that important.
Alright, hear me out.
On my way to work today, I was listening to the EA500 for the first time in a long while and was happily and enthusiastically enjoying music as much as I just was at home, on my stack with the Monarchās in my ears. Further more, in terms of detailsā¦ the EA500 spits out as much as the Monarchās it would seem. Maybe if I were to A/B them side by side, the Monarchās would squeeze out 5% more? MAYBE.
Maybe Iām going crazy or my ears just are inept in terms of noticing this dramatic, 10x the cost difference between these two IEMs when it comes to the technicalities, but Iām just begInning to come to the conclusion that as long as the IEM has good enough overall resolution and doesnāt sound ridiculously muddy, perceiving any kind of 9/10 rating on a resolution or detail scale between two IEMs with a huge price difference just isnāt what my ears are good at.
This doesnāt have to be just regarding the EA500 either, this thought process for me can be applied to a majority of my collection of IEMs.
I guess, I just donāt hear such a huge difference.
I have no idea where Iām at in terms of this hobby, I think Iāve just been overloaded this past year or so and I am completely burnt out. I just want to enjoy my music and as long as the tuning and timbre is good, with acceptable details and resolution, Iām good. The Source rabbit hole is something Iām currently being sucked into as we speak tbh and I think researching and looking at different amps/DACs have redirected my interest away from IEMs for the most part.
This hobby is funny, man. It never ends.
Pretty sure I feel the same way.
BROOOOO!
The āTOTL all-BA is the end-all of resolutionā crew kill me sometimes. More drivers donāt mean more technicalities. A well-tuned, quality DD can compete with any 6-8-14BA set up.
I could not tell you much difference between Vulkan and SA6, except the DD vs. BA bass, and MAYBE SA6 will dig a teeny bit deeper on hearing the grip change on the fret board you hear in a 2 second snippet of that one song.
And the āprestigeā of Dunuās Studio lineup.
With a good seal from a good set of tips, Vulkan is the tits though. I know talking someone into $320-380 is a big ask, but if you know someone who is determined to get SA6 and pay up to $600, then save them some damn money
I generally agree which is why I donāt really focus on details and resolution in my write ups. I think soundstage and imaging are more interesting and differentiating than pure details.
My take on it is that āresolutionā is tiered:
Tier 4
The bottom tier is poor tuning with any driver really. This is where things sound muddy, grainy, etc. aka ābadā. Bad tuning will sound bad and wonāt be āresolvingā regardless of the driver in my experience. You may hear some potential in the drivers and can EQ it to sound good and resolving but I have never heard a poor tuning sound resolving outside of crazy treble boosted sets that have āfakeā resolution but then I would still argue thatās not an objectively ābadā tuning.
Tier 3
The next tier is good tuning with bad drivers. This will sound good with decent resolution but can still come off grainy or fuzzy at the very edges of notes that can mask details.
Tier 2
The next tier is where you have good tuning and decent drivers which is where you can hit ~90% of total āresolutionā. There are good budget sets that hit this and can compare reasonably to TOTL sets.
Tier 1
The last tier is where you have good tuning and high quality drivers. This will squeeze out that last ~10% of resolution and is really only audible with 1) specific tunings that keep the mids really clean (analytical) and 2) when you are actually doing critical listening on tracks you have heard a billion times before with a high quality chain. This tier is one I am not super interested in spending money to achieve when the tier below it gets me close enough to enjoy the music, which is my goal.
Thatās a fact!
its not funny though when you pay top money and get 5% or max 10% more in return compared to a 50$ set.
buy a good tws, and auto eq it to any iem you desire. your iem journey will end for ever.
no dacs needed
no amps needed
no wires needed
Facts. āResolutionā is just how sharp/clear we perceive the notes without it being over fatiguing. Itās that fine balance that needs to be hit. As long as thereās no huge dips and masking in the tuning most IEMs will sound very similar with the breaking points being that thereās enough treble extension, vocal gain, and no mid-bass bloat.
Well said, I had a similar kind of realisation in regards to LCP drivers. I freaking love their characteristic timbre/sound. Pretty much all LCP IEMs I own are fantastic. Even though they have different FR graphs and are no detail monsters they all tickle my synapses in the right way. If had a to choose only one IEM to keep, it would be one with a LCP driver.
- Tripowin Piccolo
- Tri HBB Kai
- Tipsy Tromso
- HBB Kahn
And our ear anatomies.
@rattlingblanketwoman has his 5k spot that gets too hot for him, and I find many sets that nobody complains about fuzzy and lacking sharpness because I need a 7-10k boost. Which is why being able to find sets that allow you to hear many different styles that do music in their own ways is valuable.
Really Iām in the āspend $200-400 on a good portable source and a good desktop sourceā then get 2-3 sub $100 sets that cover your EDC and different sound styles to get a taste of what you like, then go $100-500 to get your big boy set(s).
After that, play in the hobby however you want, but you can get in and out with just that
The different DD composites all have their strengths and that is an addendum I would add to the collection list. Cause I like having one of many different driver types and like them for different reasons:
- LCP - For generally good mids
- DLC - For treble extension (when tuned for that, hi HBB Kai)
- Titanium - For speed/decay
- Bio-diaphragms - For body in the bass/low-mids
- Various Composites - For jack-of-all-trades performance
- CNT - For Cleanliness of tuning/upper-mids bite
- Berylium - For a combination of speed/decay and bass-to-mids performance
This where I am landing now. I got the Aure for my big boy set and then the Panda and Legato for my different sound styles. I have been itching to get/try the iFi GO pod even though its stupidly expensive. The Q5K is great but for portability its hard to beat the TWS adapters and I would like LDAC plus iFi has impedance matching and better power than the UTWS5 which would probably be good for the Aur. When Im home I can rock the long cable to my Hiby for the purest of tones.