2 channel vs headphones


Just curious how many of you have both a high end system but also listen to high end headphone systems as well? 

maprik

Headphones would be like having two speakers on the side of your head. YES its not the Headphones its the decibels .Like sitting in the front row of a Heavy metal concert, when you leave you can't hear correctly. If you live in NYC and then take the Subway  home ,your ears are really killing you....then you put on Headphones...and blast your ears out .forget about it.....next you need the emergency room when you can't hear.....

People now go to live concerts with Earplugs ...I see it all the time at concerts. I don't have the money to sit close anymore anyway...lol.

@limomangus - I could be mistaken, but you seem to have never listened to headphones because they are not 'like having two speakers on the side of your head' unless you've got the tiniest loudspeakers ever created or even conceived of. The trick is to get one of those headphone amps with a volume control... laugh

Enjoy your weekend...

@limomangus - why would the same number of decibels hitting your ears from headphones be any worse than the same number of decibels coming from speakers? The SPL? The speakers in headphones are miniscule compared to those in loudspeakers. I’ve been deafened by speakers in homes and venues, but can’t say the same about headphones. 

Just spit-balling, headphones are a very tight & unforgiving acoustic environment; those drivers are firing right into your ear canals. I think certain resonant peaks could get real bad in a hurry, and are not easily nor repeatably measurable, especially since what matters here is your very specific head. Especially dangerous are higher frequencies IMO. A single SPL number (averaged or at a specific frequency) isn’t nearly the whole picture. I just know that for me on average headphones are more fatiguing at the same perceived SPL than speakers (over a large trial number of both). But of course there are exceptions - some speaker setups have been fatiguing to me, and e-stat headphones in particular are a huge relief to my ears, even those with tipped-up frequencies responses that on-paper look like they would be horribly fatiguing (e.g. Stax SR-009). By far by FAR, Grado headphones have been the most fatiguing listening devices on earth in my experience. My right-ear is particularly sensitive to this, and I just can't anymore with Grados. 

My headphone AKG K340 give me a sound which comes to my ears like if i was listening to speakers out of the head... No fatigue... And i listen at relatively low sound level... 

Then the problem  is very bad headphone fatiguing one like the Grado i never heard again after the first and last time i listened to them...It was not a high level model... Like the  low cost Stax model  i disliked  for his artificial sound...

Then the danger is not headphone , it is bad design paired with high level  sound pressure and some unbalanced set of frequencies..

Headphone well chosen, optimized, at low level  for listening,for sure pose no problem...

Public concert of rock, pop etc  and speakers designed for this kind of music at high level is the problem ...

Pop music at high level in the ears for sure = deafness...

Beethoven quartet through headphone will not make me deaf .... smiley

I prefer speakers by the way to headphone.... But now in my  local condition i enjoyed my headphone too ...