You’re absolutely right sir! I meant to say Dynabrid. Got confused.
I wonder when the DD made with Organic Material will be the norm ?
Organic materials such as bio cellulose and silk?
Dynaquattro is by binary audio and dynabrid is by oriveti
Daymm! these look amazing
These kind of naming convention increases the confusion even more for the consumers
this same thing happened when every iem in the budget range was named zero
Yes, Biocellulose mainly
Still better than Zero Wave !HaHa!
They aint that rare but in iems they arent really that good from a durability perspective.
I think it would be extremely difficult to use a bio cellulose or silk DD drivers in IEMs as they as very delicate to start with and being able to replicate their performance at such form factor would be a huge task.
Yeah, they have a durability problem (see the mangird Tea driver issues). But there are a few other iems with it such as the Blessign 2 (paper driver).
Mainstream Audio Companies do use 'em too. Like Oppo(Consumer Facing Section)
ZMF do use Biocellulose too in their HPs, I think.
Denon/fostex are well known for their bio drivers as well in hps.
I believe bio drivers are more useful in hps since they should last longer. In iems, you likely have more moisture building up in them and thus a much higher risk of damage.
Yes, ZMF uses bio cellulose drivers in Auteur and Atrium but the drivers are still big enough for these materials to be implemented but in IEMs we’re talking about 1/10th of the size or even smaller.
Exactly. Durability is a concern.
Its not about the size, its about the moisture that iems build up since they are sealed in your ears. Hps are more open and I expect that the moisture is not trapped inside the shell like in an iem.
With the last linne, you scared me, do you think people living close to coastal areas should take good care of the ZMF HPs due to extreme humidity?
It is probably better to do it than not I guess.
Just put it somewhere with some silica gel packs and it should be fine.