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#1
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Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use
Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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" wrote:
Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. No, you need a larger house ! ;~) But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? See if you can find some Koss Pro4AA headphones. They're an old US design that was resurrected by a (good large) company I know in China. They will nearly crush your head if worn for hours on end but are probably the best headphones ever to exclude extraneous sound. http://reviews.cnet.com/headphones/k...7-1589445.html Graham |
#3
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On 2 Jun 2008 04:22:25 GMT, "
wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? The Sennheiser Divorce, or maybe the cheaper model, the Separation :-) --- Rob Tweed Company: M/Gateway Developments Ltd Registered in England: No 3220901 Registered Office: 58 Francis Road,Ashford, Kent TN23 7UR Web-site: http://www.mgateway.com |
#4
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On Jun 2, 12:22*am, " wrote:
Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? How much weight are you willing to endure? I have a pair of Koss Pro 4AAAs that pretty much eliminate anything short of explosions close enough to smell the burnt powder. But they are pretty clunky by weight. There are several other options along those lines. Sadly, the only effective way to screen against stray sound is by mass - movie theatres either use lead-lined drywall or multiple (minimum 5 x 5/8") layers of same, or solid concrete block - the same principle applies to headphones. Noice-cancelling headphones are most effective against steady sorts of noises such as fans & HVAC noise, vehicle interiors and so forth. They are entirely ineffective (no better or worse than standard headphones of similar physical design) against deliberate sources such as conversation, television, even other music sources - nor were they designed for that purpose. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#5
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On 2 Jun 2008 04:22:25 GMT, "
wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Same here. I use Sony noise cancelling in-ears. The in-ear system creates dampening as it is - enhanced by the electronic stuff. Not everybody can live with the in ear "feeling", but it works for me. Sound quality is fair, not excellent. While it does not drown out the unwanted sounds completely, it is good enough to not interfere with the desired sound from the laptop / MP3 player / E-book application I have running. I doubt (but did not try) that over ears would work better. I once tried an aircraft comm headset+mike set (Very bulky and expensive) - and that might have been better performing with passive dampening only. YMMV.. -- - René |
#6
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wrote in message ...
Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Nothing will completely block out outside noise. Try sticking your fingers in your ears, and listen, you'll still hear the outside world. Even with your ears blocked, sound will reach the inner ear through bone conduction and through the nose and mouth cavity. The most practical solution is one of the in-ear headphones, like the Etymotic Research. Hi-Fi News this month has a review of 6 in-ear 'phones. They reckon the Ultimate Ears sounds the best, and it seems may keep out outside noise better as it was designed for on-stage use. S. -- http://audiopages.googlepages.com |
#7
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On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote:
Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? I'd go for Beyerdynamic DT880, although to maximize what this 'closed' (and fully-cover-the-ear) phones can do you'll need to use a (small as a lighter, even) battery run headphone amplifier. I like the ones at http://www.fixup.net/products/index.htm.... both phones + amp together are a lot of dough, but I don't think you'll ever look back (and you'll forget completely about the TV!) |
#8
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On 2 Jun 2008 22:17:15 GMT, Eeyore
wrote: " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. No, you need a larger house ! ;~) Cheaper solution: Make her wear the headphones. Kal |
#9
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On Jun 3, 8:17*am, Eeyore
wrote: " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. No, you need a larger house ! * * * * ;~) But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? See if you can find some Koss Pro4AA headphones. They're an old US design that was resurrected by a (good large) company I know in China. They will nearly crush your head if worn for hours on end but are probably the best headphones ever to exclude extraneous sound.http://reviews.cnet.com/headphones/k.../4505-7877_7-1... Graham Better than Beyerdynamic 880s? |
#10
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On Jun 3, 8:17*am, Rob Tweed wrote:
On 2 Jun 2008 04:22:25 GMT, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? The Sennheiser Divorce, or maybe the cheaper model, the Separation :-) --- Rob Tweed Company: M/Gateway Developments Ltd Registered in England: No 3220901 Registered Office: 58 Francis Road,Ashford, Kent TN23 7UR Web-site:http://www.mgateway.com tres funny. |
#11
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On Jun 3, 8:18*am, René wrote:
On 2 Jun 2008 04:22:25 GMT, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Same here. I use Sony noise cancelling in-ears. The in-ear system creates dampening as it is - enhanced by the electronic stuff. Not everybody can live with the in ear "feeling", but it works for me. Sound quality is fair, not excellent. While it does not drown out the unwanted sounds completely, it is good enough to not interfere with the desired sound from the laptop / MP3 player / E-book application I have running. I doubt (but did not try) that over ears would work better. I once tried an aircraft comm headset+mike set (Very bulky and expensive) - and that might have been better performing with passive dampening only. YMMV.. -- *- René What model Sony's? Better than the Beyerdynamic 880s, someone recommended to me -- with an amp, no less. |
#12
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On Jun 3, 8:21*am, Ger wrote:
On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? I'd go for Beyerdynamic DT880, although to maximize what this 'closed' (and fully-cover-the-ear) phones can do you'll need to use a (small as a lighter, even) battery run headphone amplifier. I like the ones athttp://www.fixup.net/products/index.htm.... both phones + amp together are a lot of dough, but I don't think you'll ever look back (and you'll forget completely about the TV!) Will that work better than an in the ear Etymotic system? Which should I try first? |
#13
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#14
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On Mon, 2 Jun 2008 15:18:18 -0700, Peter Wieck wrote
(in article ): On Jun 2, 12:22*am, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? How much weight are you willing to endure? I have a pair of Koss Pro 4AAAs that pretty much eliminate anything short of explosions close enough to smell the burnt powder. But they are pretty clunky by weight. There are several other options along those lines. Yes, I recommended the Koss Pro-4A's with the same reservations. Sadly, the only effective way to screen against stray sound is by mass - movie theatres either use lead-lined drywall or multiple (minimum 5 x 5/8") layers of same, or solid concrete block - the same principle applies to headphones. Noice-cancelling headphones are most effective against steady sorts of noises such as fans & HVAC noise, vehicle interiors and so forth. They are entirely ineffective (no better or worse than standard headphones of similar physical design) against deliberate sources such as conversation, television, even other music sources - nor were they designed for that purpose. Yep! Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#15
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wrote in message ...
Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Uh, sorry if this reply seems snarky, but why do you need to be in the same room as a blaring TV to listen to music? If this is your "quality time" with "the spouse" that's kinda' sad. But, if the only reason is that your sound system is in the livingroom with the TV, then you could just pick up a set of Bluetooth wireless headphones and listen anywhere you want. My father-in-law is quite deaf from 50 years in the construction trade and we just got him a pair, they work great. As an alternative, you could broach the subject of his 'n hers headphones with your wife. If you both wear them the problem is solved. Just about all TV's manufactured in the last 25 years have audio out jacks on the back. |
#16
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TV, music and/or snoring, problems, problems....
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#17
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On 3 Jun 2008 22:45:47 GMT, "
wrote: What model Sony's? Better than the Beyerdynamic 880s, someone recommended to me -- with an amp, no less. I believe it is MDRNC22W or some such. It was relatively cheap and small, requiring only one AAA, and it still works as a normal earphone when the battery is depleted. It does not work absolute, but it lowers the S/N ratio enough to enable me to watch a documentary on the laptop while the wife / daughters watch the incidental soap. It may not work if one wants to listen to the subtilities of soundstage in classical music during a pianissimo interlude, but for light entertainment it works adequately. -- - René |
#18
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On Jun 5, 9:26*am, René wrote:
On 3 Jun 2008 22:45:47 GMT, " wrote: What model Sony's? Better than the Beyerdynamic 880s, someone recommended to me -- with an amp, no less. I believe it is MDRNC22W or some such. It was relatively cheap and small, requiring only one AAA, and it still works as a normal earphone when the battery is depleted. It does not work absolute, but it lowers the S/N ratio enough to enable me to watch a documentary on the laptop while the wife / daughters watch the incidental soap. It may not work if one wants to listen to the subtilities of soundstage in classical music during a pianissimo interlude, but for light entertainment it works adequately. -- *- René Ok, let me get this straight: the cheapo Sony -- without an amp, no less -- are better than the Koss Pro 4AAs or the Beyerdynamic 880s, both with amps? Everyone agree with this? (Blocking out, as much as possible, the incidental soap opera on TV, while I watch a documentary or listen to the radio on the laptop, the the usage here.) |
#19
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Sonnova wrote:
Yes, I recommended the Koss Pro-4A's with the same reservations. I'd recommend them too - if you're going fishing and need a boat anchor. Pro4AAs are heavy, uncomfortable, and sound like dog meat. The things they have going for them are that they a o damn near indestructable o low impedance, so old mixing boards from the 70's can drive them to audible levels in a noisy environment Unless you're doing PA using an old Peavey, you have no reason to use them. Seriously, there's no reason to even *think* about these cans for home use with a stereo that happily drives 600 ohm headphones. I understand why they had a following way back when, but that was then, this is now. //Walt |
#20
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On 5 Jun 2008 04:01:28 GMT, "
wrote: Ok, let me get this straight: the cheapo Sony -- without an amp, no less -- are better than the Koss Pro 4AAs or the Beyerdynamic 880s, both with amps? Everyone agree with this? (Blocking out, as much as possible, the incidental soap opera on TV, while I watch a documentary or listen to the radio on the laptop, the the usage here.) I only tried the Sony, no other noise cancelling phones. Koss and/or Beyer may be much better (or not?) I merely can observe that it fills my noise cancelling needs as far as light entertainment is concerned. Price / performance works for me, but the sound quality is generally "Ipod class" rather than top notch undiluted hi-end. -- - René |
#21
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On Jun 4, 11:02*pm, Walt wrote:
Sonnova wrote: Yes, I recommended the Koss Pro-4A's with the same reservations. I'd recommend them too - if you're going fishing and need a boat anchor. Pro4AAs are heavy, uncomfortable, and sound like dog meat. The things they have going for them are that they a o damn near indestructable o low impedance, so old mixing boards from the 70's can drive them to * *audible levels in a noisy environment Unless you're doing PA using an old Peavey, you have no reason to use them. Seriously, there's no reason to even *think* about these cans for home use with a stereo that happily drives 600 ohm headphones. *I understand why they had a following way back when, but that was then, this is now. a) The 4AAA is, for a fully enclosed headphone, considerably lighter than the A, or AA. One of the refinements thereto is the removal of the boom-lug for one thing - mass that does not contribute to isolation. Similarly, the head support is made of lighter materials - also non-contributory mass. b) What would you suggest instead? The OP wants true isolation from the TV when he listens. Along those lines you would use what?? As to the "cheapo Sony" vs. the Koss or Beyer options, that would depend entirely on the OP's pain threshold - which I have taken for "low". Those who regularly "multi-task" for lack of a better descriptive would have been fine with the Bose isolation headphones - already described a inadequate. The cheapo-Sony would perform along those lines, but not give anything near isolation. Again, sound is attenuated by mass, not cancellation waves in this case. Deliberate sound is far to 'fast' for noise-reduction headphones - nor were they designed for that. Peter Wieck Melrose Park, PA |
#22
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On Wed, 4 Jun 2008 21:02:09 -0700, Walt wrote
(in article ): Sonnova wrote: Yes, I recommended the Koss Pro-4A's with the same reservations. I'd recommend them too - if you're going fishing and need a boat anchor. Pro4AAs are heavy, uncomfortable, and sound like dog meat. The things they have going for them are that they a o damn near indestructable o low impedance, so old mixing boards from the 70's can drive them to audible levels in a noisy environment Unless you're doing PA using an old Peavey, you have no reason to use them. Seriously, there's no reason to even *think* about these cans for home use with a stereo that happily drives 600 ohm headphones. I understand why they had a following way back when, but that was then, this is now. //Walt They are very isolationatory, which is what we were discussing. The heaviness and the discomfort go with the territory of being mechanically capable of shutting-out outside noise. |
#23
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On Thu, 5 Jun 2008 20:49:56 -0700, René wrote
(in article ): On 5 Jun 2008 04:01:28 GMT, " wrote: Ok, let me get this straight: the cheapo Sony -- without an amp, no less -- are better than the Koss Pro 4AAs or the Beyerdynamic 880s, both with amps? Everyone agree with this? (Blocking out, as much as possible, the incidental soap opera on TV, while I watch a documentary or listen to the radio on the laptop, the the usage here.) I only tried the Sony, no other noise cancelling phones. Koss and/or Beyer may be much better (or not?) I merely can observe that it fills my noise cancelling needs as far as light entertainment is concerned. Price / performance works for me, but the sound quality is generally "Ipod class" rather than top notch undiluted hi-end. Lets face it, the only current 'phones with any REAL Hi-end performance are made by Stax. |
#24
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On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote:
Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Here's a great professional headphone no one has yet mentioned: The Sennheiser HD280 Pro Check 'em out at: http://www.sennheiserusa.com/newsite...transid=004974 Note the spec that states 'Up to 32 dB of ambient noise reduction." I have a set of the aforementioned Koss and IMO, the Sennheiser's sound better, they are lighter, and waaaay more comfortable than the Koss. As always, YMMV, of course. And as another poster suggested, get HER to wear them ![]() |
#25
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On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 16:48:05 -0700, Vinyl Rules! wrote
(in article ): On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Here's a great professional headphone no one has yet mentioned: The Sennheiser HD280 Pro Check 'em out at: http://www.sennheiserusa.com/newsite...transid=004974 Note the spec that states 'Up to 32 dB of ambient noise reduction." I have a set of the aforementioned Koss and IMO, the Sennheiser's sound better, they are lighter, and waaaay more comfortable than the Koss. As always, YMMV, of course. And as another poster suggested, get HER to wear them ![]() If both wear them neither will need the headphones to be of the isolation type. |
#26
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On Jun 16, 3:19*am, Sonnova wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 16:48:05 -0700, Vinyl Rules! wrote (in article ): On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Here's a great professional headphone no one has yet mentioned: The Sennheiser HD280 Pro Check 'em out at: http://www.sennheiserusa.com/newsite...transid=004974 Note the spec that states 'Up to 32 dB of ambient noise reduction." I have a set of the aforementioned Koss and IMO, the Sennheiser's sound better, they are lighter, and waaaay more comfortable than the Koss. As always, YMMV, of course. And as another poster suggested, get HER to wear them ![]() If both wear them neither will need the headphones to be of the isolation type. Got the Beyerdynamic 880s -- love-em. Shame, though, nothing like this also comes with the Bose-style noise reduction built in, too. |
#27
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On Jun 17, 7:45 pm, " wrote:
On Jun 16, 3:19 am, Sonnova wrote: On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 16:48:05 -0700, Vinyl Rules! wrote (in article ): On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Here's a great professional headphone no one has yet mentioned: The Sennheiser HD280 Pro Check 'em out at: http://www.sennheiserusa.com/newsite...transid=004974 Note the spec that states 'Up to 32 dB of ambient noise reduction." I have a set of the aforementioned Koss and IMO, the Sennheiser's sound better, they are lighter, and waaaay more comfortable than the Koss. As always, YMMV, of course. And as another poster suggested, get HER to wear them ![]() If both wear them neither will need the headphones to be of the isolation type. Got the Beyerdynamic 880s -- love-em. Shame, though, nothing like this also comes with the Bose-style noise reduction built in, too. Glad to hear you like them so much. I really don't think you'll ever look back as far as the issue concerns the 880's vs. the Koss. On the matter of powering them just through the laptop.... The use of a decent headphone amp instead of powering straight from the laptop is not just an issue of volume. In my listening at least, the use of an amp gives a substantially greater sense of fullness and dimension even at lower volumes than the laptop's amplification output can manage. I'm no techie, so I can't explain why, except that having 'headroom' in the reproduction is different than just being able to reach higher volumes without distortion. The best of course would be if you were able to borrow same to listen for yourself for a few days, to see for yourself. In my own experience it's pretty much the same as having a better amp in ones home hifi. Even if never running the volume knob past, say, 10 o'clock. It will sound better as a rule than the amp that has to run at say 3 o'clock to get the same subjective sense of volume. As for the noise cancellation issue, again I'm no techie, but my own listening strongly suggests that the nose cancellation designs muck with the signal to achieve their goal, with the result being that clarity (read: mimic of live sound experience) suffers. Note: Do NOT let her wear them with the TV source ; she'll prefer them to non- headphone in this case; and you'll be back to the tinny sound of the TV, which you didn't want to watch/listen in the first place... or else you'll be stuck with buying a another set. You'll still be a TV- plus-music couple, but now you'll be laying there as a double set of phones. You'll both be very happy with your respective sources, but with all those wires you'll now have a completely different set of complications when the ecstasy of the good sound leads you two to get intimate and you both get tangled up in all those wires! |
#28
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On Jun 19, 8:30*am, Ger wrote:
On Jun 17, 7:45 pm, " wrote: On Jun 16, 3:19 am, Sonnova wrote: On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 16:48:05 -0700, Vinyl Rules! wrote (in article ): On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Here's a great professional headphone no one has yet mentioned: The Sennheiser HD280 Pro Check 'em out at: http://www.sennheiserusa.com/newsite...transid=004974 Note the spec that states 'Up to 32 dB of ambient noise reduction." I have a set of the aforementioned Koss and IMO, the Sennheiser's sound better, they are lighter, and waaaay more comfortable than the Koss. As always, YMMV, of course. And as another poster suggested, get HER to wear them ![]() If both wear them neither will need the headphones to be of the isolation type. Got the Beyerdynamic 880s -- love-em. Shame, though, nothing like this also comes with the Bose-style noise reduction built in, too. Glad to hear you like them so much. I really don't think you'll ever look back as far as the issue concerns the 880's vs. the Koss. On the matter of powering them just through the laptop.... The use of a decent headphone amp instead of powering straight from the laptop is not just an issue of volume. In my listening at least, the use of an amp gives a substantially greater sense of fullness and dimension even at lower volumes than the laptop's amplification output can manage. I'm no techie, so I can't explain why, except that having 'headroom' in the reproduction is different than just being able to reach higher volumes without distortion. The best of course would be if you were able to borrow same to listen for yourself for a few days, to see for yourself. In my own experience it's pretty much the same as having a better amp in ones home hifi. Even if never running the volume knob past, say, 10 o'clock. It will sound better as a rule than the amp that has to run at say 3 o'clock to get the same subjective sense of volume. As for the noise cancellation issue, again I'm no techie, but my own listening strongly suggests that the nose cancellation designs muck with the signal to achieve their goal, with the result being that clarity (read: mimic of live sound experience) suffers. Note: Do NOT let her wear them with the TV source ; she'll prefer them to non- headphone in this case; and you'll be back to the tinny sound of the TV, which you didn't want to watch/listen in the first place... or else you'll be stuck with buying a another set. You'll still be a TV- plus-music couple, but now you'll be laying there as a double set of phones. You'll both be very happy with your respective sources, but with all those wires you'll now have a completely different set of complications when the ecstasy of the good sound leads you two to get intimate and you both get tangled up in all those wires! Thanks for the advice. I'm going to price some amps. The 'phones cost like $280. Should I spend the same amount on an amp? Second question, when the volume is up on the laptop, my wife has noticed, not complained mind you, lol, that she can hear the music a little. Are there head phones at least as nice as the 880s that block the sound that others might hear emanating from the headphones? |
#29
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On Jun 20, 5:48*pm, " wrote:
On Jun 19, 8:30*am, Ger wrote: On Jun 17, 7:45 pm, " wrote: On Jun 16, 3:19 am, Sonnova wrote: On Fri, 13 Jun 2008 16:48:05 -0700, Vinyl Rules! wrote (in article ): On Jun 2, 12:22 am, " wrote: Spouse watches TV. I listen to music. She won't close caption. I use Bose noise-reduction units on my laptop to listen to music, but I can still here the TV, no matter how low it goes. I assume I need over the ear headphones. But what are the best that will close to 100 percent drown out TV and other noise? Here's a great professional headphone no one has yet mentioned: The Sennheiser HD280 Pro Check 'em out at: http://www.sennheiserusa.com/newsite...transid=004974 Note the spec that states 'Up to 32 dB of ambient noise reduction." I have a set of the aforementioned Koss and IMO, the Sennheiser's sound better, they are lighter, and waaaay more comfortable than the Koss. As always, YMMV, of course. And as another poster suggested, get HER to wear them ![]() If both wear them neither will need the headphones to be of the isolation type. Got the Beyerdynamic 880s -- love-em. Shame, though, nothing like this also comes with the Bose-style noise reduction built in, too. Glad to hear you like them so much. I really don't think you'll ever look back as far as the issue concerns the 880's vs. the Koss. On the matter of powering them just through the laptop.... The use of a decent headphone amp instead of powering straight from the laptop is not just an issue of volume. In my listening at least, the use of an amp gives a substantially greater sense of fullness and dimension even at lower volumes than the laptop's amplification output can manage. I'm no techie, so I can't explain why, except that having 'headroom' in the reproduction is different than just being able to reach higher volumes without distortion. The best of course would be if you were able to borrow same to listen for yourself for a few days, to see for yourself. In my own experience it's pretty much the same as having a better amp in ones home hifi. Even if never running the volume knob past, say, 10 o'clock. It will sound better as a rule than the amp that has to run at say 3 o'clock to get the same subjective sense of volume. As for the noise cancellation issue, again I'm no techie, but my own listening strongly suggests that the nose cancellation designs muck with the signal to achieve their goal, with the result being that clarity (read: mimic of live sound experience) suffers. Note: Do NOT let her wear them with the TV source ; she'll prefer them to non- headphone in this case; and you'll be back to the tinny sound of the TV, which you didn't want to watch/listen in the first place... or else you'll be stuck with buying a another set. You'll still be a TV- plus-music couple, but now you'll be laying there as a double set of phones. You'll both be very happy with your respective sources, but with all those wires you'll now have a completely different set of complications when the ecstasy of the good sound leads you two to get intimate and you both get tangled up in all those wires! Thanks for the advice. I'm going to price some amps. The 'phones cost like $280. Should I spend the same amount on an amp? Second question, when the volume is up on the laptop, my wife has noticed, not complained mind you, lol, that she can hear the music a little. Are there head phones at least as nice as the 880s that block the sound that others might hear emanating from the headphones? I don't know the answer as far as external sound blocking is concerned. When I shopped for mine, the only criterion was sound quality. As it turned out, there is general consensus that, all other things being equal, the 'closed' designs will give better all-round music, and incidentally also block out sound better. As for price of headphone amp, I would go by powerful+small size+battery power... I've unexpectedly traveled some distances, only to be pleased that a large size did not preclude good music on the trip. I would also spend the most that's affordable (no point adding a really cheap link in an otherwise good chain), my pref once again would be Dr. Xin, depending on what you can find out re delivery time.... |
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