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#1
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Well, I will try posting again, as my earlier post never showed up.
Well, I have been listening to the Grado SR-80 for the last 4 to 5 days with my Dell Laptop. I listen about 2 to 3 hrs per day, I must say these are great headphones, however I am not exactly ecstatic, I am not getting goosebumps as I listen to my familiar music. It does sound pretty nice tho, I am no audiophile and I dont understand terms like "sharp highs", "clear mids", "tight bass" etc. As a lay man all I will say is this : When I listen to the Grado SR-80, it feels like I am listening to a pretty good stereo system in a big room. I have never listened to any audiophile speakers like Magnepan, Paradigm, B&W, etc. All I have listened to is my Aiwa "mini" system. (better than a boombox thats about it). Once I listened to a friends Big JBL speakers with a seperate amplifier etc, he has now upgraded to Bose 901. Both these sounded much bigger and room-filling than my Aiwa mini system. Listening to the Grado's gives me that feeling. Details : I wont pretend that I can hear plenty of little details from my music source (CD) that I have never heard before. I started off by listening to "Every breath you take", the Police classic, and I heard the guitar squeaks, but believe me, I had heard the same squeaks with my plastic cheapies also. But I think there may be some little details that I think I hear, but anyway, the main vocals drown these out so it is so minor I dont see the big difference. Also, I cant tell any difference between 128 k MP3 vs 360k MP3 vs pure CD. All this audiophile talk about "unmistakeable punchiness" of compressed music etc is beyond me. All this talk about "you will be amazed to hear details you never heard in your CD" is a tad overrated, imo. Or, maybe I just have below average ears. I am probably just not gifted. Imaging and soundstage : I dont know what this exactly means in audiophile lingo, but when listening to the Grado's I dont feel like I am sitting as an audience, I can hear the main vocals sort of above my head and "to the back" of my head and the stereo seperation is so stark - I can hear some sounds right next to my right or left ear, feels wierd - it is hard to describe, it feels like I am sitting on stage with the musicians but facing away from the musicians with my back to the audience. It is a strange feeling - I wont say it is good or bad - just different. I still dont get it - why they say "open" phones are better than "closed" phones. The Grado's leak a lot of sound, it is almost like a small radio playing. I live alone in a quiet apartment and when I left the phones on at mid volume, I could even hear it from my bathroom. They were that "open" (leakage). My last plastic cheapies were earbud style (not in-ear) and I could keep volume levels low. Since Grados are a bit away from the ears, I am having to keep the volume on my winamp at 50-60% and the volume bar on my laptop at around 40%. I hope that wont affect my hearing long term. This is when I listen to regular pop CDs like Madonna, Sting etc. Comfort : I was apprehensive about this but surprisingly I find them quite comfortable. They are almost circumaural (may be I have small ears), i.e. they almost cover my ears completely. Only after about 2.5 hrs it gets slightly uncomfortable. I am a little bit disappointed because I was expecting this great musical bliss and nirvana, maybe I should listen to some special CD and then compare to my plastic cheapies : For instance, I guess I wll try "A woman's heart", some jazz tune thats supposed to test low ends of music system. I feel my plastic earbuds got me almost at 85% of audiophile quality, and they cost only 10 bucks, I cant seem to appreciate the greatness of the Grado's. I am not sure if the phones have "broken in", maybe they will slightly improve. Is there any CD that people can think of where one can clearly hear the difference between my cheap earphones vs Grado SR-80 that would justify the $80 difference in price - not just Grado but any headphone more than say $40.00 ? Or, any so-called "high end" headphone for that matter ?! |
#2
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![]() "Balaji" wrote in message oups.com... I listen about 2 to 3 hrs per day, I must say these are great headphones... I am a little bit disappointed because I was expecting this great musical bliss and nirvana, maybe I should listen to some special CD and then compare to my plastic cheapies : For instance, I guess I wll try "A woman's heart", some jazz tune thats supposed to test low ends of music system. I feel my plastic earbuds got me almost at 85% of audiophile quality, and they cost only 10 bucks, I cant seem to appreciate the greatness of the Grado's. Hmmm, they're "great", but you can't appreciate the greatness of them. First of all, you're not getting great sound to begin with with MP3 and your laptop. Second, I don't really think they're great headphones. I'd recommend going to a high end stereo store near you and ask to listen to one of their best stereos. Tell them what kind of music you like. That'll give you some idea of a reference. Take it from there. |
#3
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jeffc:
First of all, you're not getting great sound to begin with with MP3 and your laptop. True Second, I don't really think they're great headphones. There's lots worse! I'd recommend going to a high end stereo store near you and ask to listen to one of their best stereos. Tell them what kind of music you like. That'll give you some idea of a reference. Probably false. The rooms tend to suck; many current high end speakers like Thiel, McIntosh, Legacy, are notorious for golden showering the dynamic overlay of the soundstage, and they like to use musical selections that are almost tailored to hide the flaws of what they front (because they sure don't represent!). All that aside, headphones are not supposed to sound like far field music reproduction. Compare headphones to headphones, ideally with binaural source: compare nearfield to nearfield and compare full field to full field. Don't mix your mismetaphors. For audiophiles, Stax has always been the preferred headphone, compare it to them. Find out what they used in the studios when they made your favorite rock records, if you're a rock fan, and audition that too. Find out what the US Navy issues submariners for sonar duty, audition those too. |
#4
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![]() they're "great", but you can't appreciate the greatness of them Hi Jeff, good catch there ![]() first line when I said they are great. Okay, they are good, what I meant is I couldnt quite understand the overwhelming gushing response in all review sites out there (including audiophile sites) - Check out the Stereophile review of SR-60 to see what I mean. With those kind of reviews and Golden Note award and Grand Prix award and what not, I was naturally expecting musical nirvana. My personal feeling is that my ears are not special and I guess I would complain even with the Senn HD-580 or Grado RS-1 or Ety-E4. I get your point about MP3 but then again, I couldnt tell the diff between MP3 vs original Audio CD playing on my dvd drive on the laptop. I was listening to Pet Shop Boys Discography, Madonna - Immaculate collection (La Isla Bonita used to sound Terrific on the $10.00 plastic phones but with the Grado it was a bit of let down), Sting (Police) - Dire Straits' Brothers in Arms 128K MP3 sounded pretty good but I didnt have the CD to compare it with. Kenny G's Breathless sounded pretty ordinary in 128k MP3, again I didnt have the orig cd to compare with. Now dont flame me for listening to Kenny G ![]() What do you mean you dont think they are great headphones ? You mean my unit or Grado SR-80 in general ? If the latter, what do you think is the greatest set of cans out there purely for sound quality (forgetting comfort) ? I can forget this whole audiophile business and go back to my AIWA and plastic headphone (at least it will save me money) but I want to make at least a few attempts to try to understand what audiophiles talk about, I want to see the promised land, especially as someone who was trained in classical music. Thats why I bought the Grados to start with. |
#5
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![]() "Balaji" wrote in message ups.com... they're "great", but you can't appreciate the greatness of them Hi Jeff, good catch there ![]() first line when I said they are great. Okay, they are good, what I meant is I couldnt quite understand the overwhelming gushing response in all review sites out there (including audiophile sites) - Check out the Stereophile review of SR-60 to see what I mean. Oh I have, and I don't quite understand it either. I think Grados are fairly colored. But that's the sound many people like, especially for rock. Not that they sound bad, mind you. With those kind of reviews and Golden Note award and Grand Prix award and what not, I was naturally expecting musical nirvana. My personal feeling is that my ears are not special and I guess I would complain even with the Senn HD-580 or Grado RS-1 or Ety-E4. I think anyone could tell the difference between the Sennheiser and the Grado if you A/B them. Personal preference, of course. I get your point about MP3 but then again, I couldnt tell the diff between MP3 vs original Audio CD playing on my dvd drive on the laptop. Actually that's a good thing. You can listen to much less expensive stereos and be satisified with it. What do you mean you dont think they are great headphones ? You mean my unit or Grado SR-80 in general ? If the latter, what do you think is the greatest set of cans out there purely for sound quality (forgetting comfort) ? Well I think the Sennheiser 600 is both more comfortable and better sounding, and they are probably the best headphones I've listened to. But I haven't listened to them all (Stax etc.). By that I mean they're more accurate than the Grado, which is not to say everyone would prefer that sound. I have some AKG K240 which sound more like the Grados, and are cheaper than the Sennheiser and are the most comfortable of all. I can forget this whole audiophile business and go back to my AIWA and plastic headphone (at least it will save me money) but I want to make at least a few attempts to try to understand what audiophiles talk about, I want to see the promised land, especially as someone who was trained in classical music. Thats why I bought the Grados to start with. Well like I said go to some high end stores and listen to some good stereos. Then go to some cheapo store like Circuit City or Best Buy and listen. If you find a difference, decide which you like more and which you'd actually be willing to pay for (being able to tell a difference between 2 stereos doesn't mean a whole lot - the question is, is one really worth twice the price of the other?) You will either form some opinions of what you prefer, or not. If not, don't worry about it. If you do, then you'll have to be able to describe your priorities and preferences. For example, Grado RS-1 are very expensive headphones, but I don't like them. To me they sound tubby and bloated. But those who like that sound call it warm and rich. The Sennheisers are neutral, with extended highs, deep bass, and good detail, but without too much bass or treble volume at any particular frequency. Those who don't like them call them bright and analytical. You don't have to use this language. Use whatever language comes to mind when you listen, if you do indeed hear a difference at all. |
#6
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