Agreed.Chrono212 said:snip
"the wubiest of wub wub"
And thus, a new playlist is born.
LordFish said:Hmm, I've never heard of this make, I wonder if they are actually any good...
Frequency Response (low): 20 Hz
Frequency Response (high): 20 kHz
That'll be a 'no' then More of a fashion statement, no wonder it works so well with Apple products.
For truly wubby wub-wub check out the low range on my (cheaper) Sony MDRXB40EX
Frequency Response (low): 4 Hz
Frequency Response (high): 24 kHz
Thanks for the show though, Ashley!
Specs aren't everything; companies can claim a 4-24k response range, but it might have an awful frequency response curve. Munitio could be modest with their advertised 20-20k response range.LordFish said:Hmm, I've never heard of this make, I wonder if they are actually any good...
Frequency Response (low): 20 Hz
Frequency Response (high): 20 kHz
That'll be a 'no' then More of a fashion statement, no wonder it works so well with Apple products.
For truly wubby wub-wub check out the low range on my (cheaper) Sony MDRXB40EX
Frequency Response (low): 4 Hz
Frequency Response (high): 24 kHz
Thanks for the show though, Ashley!
Spakka said:Snip
I know frequency response isn't a great indication of quality, but it gives you an idea and helpdesk weed out the 20-20k's that tend to be god awful (Skull Candy, Dre Beats and the like)UNHchabo said:snip
LordFish said:Spakka said:SnipI know frequency response isn't a great indication of quality, but it gives you an idea and helpdesk weed out the 20-20k's that tend to be god awful (Skull Candy, Dre Beats and the like)UNHchabo said:snip
And just like anything the manufacturers will try and bend the rules as much as they can, but when they are all bending the rules the same amount it gives you a yard stick to work to.
Additionally those Sony's have a 13.5mm driver and do indeed kick out some very rich bass, so the 4hz did indeed indicate reality
Hence the whole paragraph about 'rule-bending', 'yardsticks' and 'Indications of performance'. I know the ear phones sound good low down, my sound tech mate said the bass was richer than a lot of other buds so I'd like to postulate a corelation between 'published low end frequency range' and subjective quality.PoolCleaningRobot said:Lol. Except humans can't hear sounds lower than 20 hz and higher than 20,000 hz (20 khz)
Ooo, I am VERY interested Have been wanting another pair to keep at workOwyn_Merrilin said:snip
But you can feel the the below 20Hz frequencies. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InfrasoundPoolCleaningRobot said:Lol. Except humans can't hear sounds lower than 20 hz and higher than 20,000 hz (20 khz)
Yeah, how DARE they only include the maximum human hearing range!LordFish said:That'll be a 'no' then More of a fashion statement, no wonder it works so well with Apple products.
There will always be people who buy it anyway. I mean, there's people who swear they can tell the difference even if they can't in a lab test (These people predate dubstep by a fair margin).Costia said:Though I highly doubt that any in ear headphone is capable of doing that due to the amount of power required to make it noticable.