T
tastycaramel
Guest
Currently, I'm deciding on Skullcandy Hesh, Lowrider, Smoking Buds or creative aurvana. Are they worth the money in the long run? I wouldn't want to be replacing headphones every few months.
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In my experience, even when you pay quite a lot for earbuds from reputable, high-end companies (Shure in my case), you can still have as many problems as you do with mid-range buds. It's just more frustrating coz of that extra cost
Having said that, the Shures are still the best sounding and most comfortable earbuds I've owned. And Shure were very good about replacing the faulty sets.
I currently have MEElectronics S6. They're lower mid-range but the sound is actually pretty good and they're way more comfortable than average. I've had 'em about 3 months and so far (touchwood) no issues. Which is unusual for me - I appear to be the kiss of death to most earphones.
I paid around S$60 but I'm sure you could get 'em cheaper at Sim Lim Square
No, I lived there for almost 6 years. Great place - absolutely loved my time there.
Did get PR, so I guess I was semi-Singaporean
We had a thread on this a while back. Lots of good suggestions:
http://androidforums.com/music/653602-what-kind-headphones-do-you-use.html
As much as I love music, I use just a pair of the new Apple earbuds. They're cheap (for Apple!), comfy and have decent range. I can never find a pair of in-ear buds that fit my ears.
Also, though pricey, Cnet seemed to love these;
http://reviews.cnet.com/headsets/v-moda-remix-nero/4505-13831_7-33982121.html
Also, I have these:
Klipsch Image S4 II Review - Watch CNET's Video Review
Sound quality is great. Cables are a little flimsy and ultimately, none of the included buds didn't fit, so I no longer use them.
Is audio technical good? Heard that their products are a bang for their Buck .
I'm the happy owner of a couple sets of A-T ATH-M50 cans for playing stuff loud and general purpose use, as well as my AKG 701 phones that are for more critical listening. (Like this.) The thing is that both of them are large, over the ear types that require no small amount of amplifier power to sound good.
For portable use, in-ear models are really the only sensible way to go unless you're trying to make some kind of fashion statement. I've owned all sorts, from $15 Koss earbuds that are a great bargain, to $300 Etymotic reference models that are way too costly and delicate for me to be comfortable taking out of the house no matter how good they sound.
My advice is to audition if at all possible. I know that's going to be hard for earbuds. If you can't, then I'd listen more to what actual audiophiles are saying about the product, not what some mass media computer website says. These are audio products, not computing peripherals.