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1953. Newly arrived in Canada from England. 9 years old. Mounted a conical "horn" made of rolled up paper on the little flesh-colored cheap plastic piezo-electric earphone (singular) that came with my crystal set, in accordance with my father's guidance (he did similar in India for the men in the barracks to hear short wave news from Holland on his Philips Skyscraper radio). Lo and behold, you could hear the output on the far side of the attic! I repeated the trick later in the classroom. Teacher was not impressed.Totally analog, only two or three parts (one being the cat's whisker) between the antenna and the earphone. Still not exactly hi-fi!As a result, when asked how long I have been "into" sound, it is tempting to cite this experiment!
1. Christmas 1984. Koss Porta Pro headpones. I soon discovered that if I pressed them to my ears, the bass got much better. I immediately wanted that bass all the time...2. Winter 2011. Alessandro MS1i. I bought them on a lark, for a desktop system. It lead to significant amounts of time being spent on Head Fi, and the eventual purchase of some SR60i's that I modded.3. Spring 2011. Audeze LCD-2's. At a local Head Fi meet with some uber rare Hawaii amp or something. WOW was that good. The price for the combo was somewhere around a new car however!I stuck with the modded SR60i's and am still happy.
charmerci - I think that now that you are no longer a poor student you should try again to get a listen to the 600ohm AKG 240DFs if you can.
Your First "Headphone Moment"
I have been a headphone fanatic for many moons, I have to say that my real "headphone" moment came when I veered off the well beaten track of Beyer, Senn, Grado, AKG etc, and discovered vintage planar headphones. Not a big fan of the pioneer piezo , it still sounds like it belongs in the 70s, but Taket T2 sounds promising for that technology. The earliest planar magnetic headphone was the Wharfedale isodynamic, sold for 20quid and is one of my favourite headphones today. The yamaha orthodynamics are by far the closest thing I have heard to capture that "maggie" experience. I should add, I am not a fan of Grado. The original RS1 was special, but most of the others are voiced too forward for me. I strongly recommend scouring eBay for a cheap yamaha yh2/hp2 , make some minor modifications and enjoy that planar magic. ..dB
Back in the '70's...I used them with my Pioneer SX-1010 receiver....just like in the photo...still have them somewhere here..
The Koss HV-1. I still have them and they work perfectly.
I was down at Best Buy the other day looking at phones. wasn't to impressed with the new B&W phones for $400.Ray Bronk
Recently I discovered head-fi.org and renewed my interest... I have added ATH M50's and AD700's, Denon 2000's and 7000's, Grado SR325i's and RS1's, and HiFiMan HE500's.
Two nights ago I had my latest headphone moment...I listened to both sides of my 200g Quiex vinyl pressing of Sarah McLachlan's Surfacing. It sounded different than I have ever heard it sound before. "I Love You", the second song on the first side, is one of several songs I have found perfect for auditioning speakers. It has a low, pulsating bass tone and Sarah is miced very close, she sounds breathy. I have found the recording unlistenable on most metal dome tweeters as they emphasize the breathiness in her voice, most make it shrill and extremely fatiguing. The low bass note is good for plumbing the bass extension of monitors. Fritz's Carbon 7's make this song very listenable and reproduce every nuance, or so I thought. On my Sennheiser HD 598's I finally heard the song as it was meant to be heard - she was whispering in my ear! It brought goosebumps to my arms. The rest of the album, one of my favorites, was amazing.Vinyl through headphones rocks! (It did however point out I need to invest in a real RCM.)Martin