In Other news... A quick heads-up... something that just blew me away.
A few days ago I needed a bunch of cheap extension cords; they were available as an "add-on" for a good price on Amazon, so I built up an order to get to the minimum. Among the many things I bought was the
YinYoo KZ ZSE dual driver earbuds for the wallet-shattering price of $5.99.
I'd link to the page on Amazon for you, but since they sold out, it now links to a higher tier YinYoo product for $24. Chinglish ad copy set aside, they have some pretty impressive specs for any sub-$30 headphones, so I decided to give 'em a try for only $6. I got the blue ones.
I know, I'm weird... but when I listen with phones, I still prefer an iPod.
One of the caveats of every iPod I've ever owned is that if you enable ANY EQ of any sort, the iPod drops Max Volume by 3-10 dB. Period. Nothing you can effing do about it short of running it through an external amp. (You headphone tube-amp weenies can eat my shorts... I need to be able to do shit when I jam out and damage my eardrums!
) Finding a set of phones that actually sound good on default EQ is a bit of a hassle; hence all the rage for all these uber-expensive headphones nowadays.
Anyhoo... these things are freaking amazing for a $6-8 set of earbuds; they easily blow away my decade-long favorite
Creative EP-630 "budget headphones" when playing with my many iPod Nanos. Where the 630s have good bass and crisp, balanced highs, they've always been just a little thin on mid; which especially with female vocalists can really hurt the presence. Also, the 630s aren't capable of handling the full output of any of my iPods on anything really dynamic; you'll hear the driver start to waffle at around 80% volume, then they start to cavitate and drop off a cliff of distortion.
These have everything the 630s lack... easily 5-10hz lower bass response, more volume at the same level, and they actually show you where the iPod comes up short and they can take more... 90-95% volume or so the drumbeats hammer hard, and mids are still full and bright but you start to hear the HF clipping in the D-A converter (or the original sampling; the difference doesn't matter) but there's no waffling and everything else is TIGHT.
Yeah, there are a lot of earphones out there that can do this... but I haven't come across any as good as the ~$25 EP-630s for the money, and certainly not for $6-8.
No wonder Amazon is trying to make them disappear!
mnem
woohoo! woohoo!
woohoo! woohoo!