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HERE'S what I'm looking for:

I need sealed type.
Very comfortable.
Not too bright (fatigue factor).
Under $250

I will use these in my home studio late at night instead of my monitors, to keep from waking others.
I have a pair of Grado 80's (luv'em), but they hurt after 30 minutes or so of use.
I want "sealed" because at work, the co-workers can hear the "open" kind, and passing out earplugs to them didn't go over so well. :o

Also I have not tried the "in ear" type. The dealer doesn't allow those to be passed between everyone's ears, and I can't say I blame him (EWWWW).

=RR=

Comments

anonymous Sat, 01/01/2005 - 07:55

redrabbit wrote: HERE'S what I'm looking for: I need sealed type.
Very comfortable. Not too bright (fatigue factor). Under $250

Sony MDR-7509. Retails for roughly $219

They are nice monitoring quality headphones, a tad soft on the high end in my opinion, which is the way you want it. They are also reasonably comfortable; fit small peoples heads if thats an issue many headphones annoyingly are made for big fat oversized american heads]; and are of the sealed type with very decent isolation to the point where they can be used in a vocal booth without leakage into the condensor.... [which isnt what you wanted them for... but I thought I'd add tha in.]

JoeH Sat, 01/01/2005 - 09:24

The Sony MDR 7506's sell for about $100 discount at most Sam Ash, Guitar Center & online stores. They sound fine, and they will give you what you need for the times you've got to use HPs. (You also get a nice faux leather drawstring bag and a gold plated removable 1/4" to 1/8" adapter for the plug, as well.)

Always know what you're listening to; check and recheck your mixes again and again with speakers, etc. so you know where the differences are when you're working with HPs. You can be easily fooled with constant use.

For a $250 budget, you can buy two pairs, and still have a little left over. You'll always need second somewhere....

JamieTate Mon, 01/03/2005 - 20:10

Kev wrote: T-20's can have a little too much spill for a vocal

The "New" T-20's aren't the same headphones as the good T-20's we're all used to. They have ear pads that fall off, the cable is no longermade out of soft rubber but a harder plastic and the sound is much more midrange heavy without the low end of the originals. Also, they have a harsher, more pinched sounding top end.

Having used T-20's in the studio every day for over ten years I just bought 15 of these things and am really upset they changed them.

I wrote to Fostex and they sent me new ear pieces that fit properly. In fact, they are the same ones the original T-20's came with.

There's nothing they can do about the sound though. That's why I'm looking for a new kind of headphones to use in my studios also. I was thinking about Beyer DT 150's but it's hard to sing with a closed cup phone.

redrabbit Tue, 01/04/2005 - 10:15

Wow, lotsa replies for what I and Gaff think is an over-asked question. Thanks.

I ordered some HPhones and, funny enough, they are not in any of you're recommendations (although I auditioned many here).

I ordered some AKG 271 S.......$159

My listening thoughts:

(These thoughts were based on about 3 minutes of listening , per HP....so there was no "long-term use" evaluation. Keep that in mind.)

Sony 7506, 7509.....Very comfy. Highly detailed, as if I was missing none of the music. Possibly a bit too analytical when compared to others, but I can see why people find them usefull. I might get some in the future.

Ultrasone..(forgot model#?) similar to the Sony's.

AKG 271 Studio..... Huge cans, covers the entire ear (take note Dumbo). To me, these had more space in the music, more air, where as the Sony's seemed like you had two speakers pressed close to each ear. Is it possible that the AKG's are more colored, and veiled, and therefore sound more pleasing? Maybe, but I felt like I could live with these, over the long run.......and I will not be using ANY HPs for critical listening.

Anyway, these were my thoughts. The Beyer 770's were not available for audition. The 271S , at $159, allow me to get another pair, when I feel the time is right.

=RR=

anonymous Fri, 01/07/2005 - 14:29

I have some Ultrasone RFI-650's that have some sort of unique speaker angle that seems a bit louder, but are very easy to listen to for long periods of time. When I am editing through the night, 4-5 hours go by and I forget that I am wearing them. They do a great job on isolating the sound (keeping it in and keeping it out), and (for me) very, very little listening fatigue. Obviously, I like them. I bought them from Sweetwater.com and unfortunately they sent them with a coiled wire which is a pain if you move around, so be sure to get the straight wire. They also have a 550 version that is less expensive. Check out the selection at (dead link removed)
SG