I’ve found soundnews.net to be a good source of useful and thorough HeadFi reviews just fyi if you haven’t been there.
4K headphone + headphone amp/dac system recommendations please
I have 4K to spend on a better headphone system and have no expertise in the headphone zone.
Currently using old Grado SR 225 cans with Schiit Jotunheim 2 amp (single ended connection). Source is Jay's CDT2 transport and I'm using the internal DAC in my Hegel H390.
While the Hegel's onboard DAC is pretty good, it is a bit thin in the mids. I'd prefer something a bit more fleshed out in that frequency range.
I'm not finding many headphone amp/DAC combos. I am not interested in Chord or import brands that cannot be serviced in US.
The Teac UD 507 looks like a possibility. Moon Audio sells it and recommends HiFiMan HE100 V4 Stealth Magnet currently on sale for $949 to pair with the Teac.
Please Note: This budget will also need to accomodate a power cable and an AES/EBU cable to connect to transport.
In terms of sonics, I favor musicality over detail. I'm very sensitive to fatiguing highs. At the same time, I prize tight bass.
I listen to 3 types of music: acoustic Jazz, non-classical acoustic (NewGrass, Singer-Songwriter, Folk, etc) and some Classic Rock.
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I totally understand you have experience with tube gear with guitar amps and inexpensive tube gear back in the day. However, the sonic characteristics you seek would seem to possibly be best served with some sort of tube in your chain. Whether that's tube in the preamp, part of the DAC stage, or amplifier. And there's a big difference in tube gear when you go up price tiers. Just food for thought do what you think is best. Best advice for headphones would be to try is Meze Empyrean and Audeze, whichever you think suits you (LCD-X probably my favorite headphones because of the very realistic and natural sounding mid range). They just have a musicality to them with great bass extension. Otherwise some sennheiser 6xx with some super good front end gear (probably with a tube somewhere in there) would fit your preferences. As long as you also have the ability to EQ them (this is probably the most important thing I have said in this rant) - this goes for any pair of headphones. Can take your rig from ok to outstanding. Best of luck in your journey |
I noticed criticism on the Sennheiser headphones... I think most of the observations are the result of the electronics used to fee them, more than the headphones themselves. I was surprised when I finally feed my flagship Denon, Beyerdynamic, Ultrasound, Sennheiser, and Focal how much of the unique differences went away. |
I’m unfamiliar with that site. Thanks for the pointer.
I don’t doubt it. But I worry about availability, expense and the gradual degradation of tubes over time that somehow brings to mind the metaphor of a frog obviously being boiled to death over a period of incremental temperature changes. Thanks for your suggestions of Meze Empyrean and Audeze. I would not call myself a bass head; I don’t prefer music in which bass plays an outsized role. However, poor bass extension, like fatiguing highs, is something I cannot put up with for long. I’m not sure the Sennheisers would be adequate in this regard, so the Audeze might well be worth a listen. On the other hand, the Jotunheim in single-ended mode has excellent bass, which might work with the Senn HD600 series. RE: EQ, I noticed many of the reviews on headphones.com mention EQ. It would seem it’s assumed that EQ is an expected component in headphone systems, these days. I’ve had a Lokius in my main system before. I’m not very techie, so I’d actually prefer twisting knobs to using ap on a phone to control a digital interface. Can you say more about/be more specific, regarding what factors are at play when utilizing the sort of electronics you favor ?
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@stuartk If you are close to Los Angeles there are a few great options to hear some great phones. BTW - I should have mentioned Stax as a brand I like. At the Denver meetup in January a Stax rep had the entire lineup for me to hear. I think the entire Meze lineup was also there, except for the 109 which I ended up buying. You need to buy one of their amps to drive them but some of those amps are not expensive. I preferred the Stax to Meze but got Meze to save money on something I use infrequently. |
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