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That helps some headphones, but it's extremely crude since it has an effect much wider than a parametric EQ.
I was expecting you could change the cup stuffing or pads/cable.
It's OK !...the working poor mostly get their gear off the used market these days anyway.. where we can get it for a lot less money! I'll just wait until I can get a used Utopia headphone for 2k or less! You have a nice day
I disagree with so much of this I hardly know where to begin. First, the suggestion that one should use a headphone as-is without EQ, assumes the sound is so perfect that EQ won't help. Secondly, that there is nothing wrong with the Utopia's soundstage, it's just not ........, well, EQ does address that if you have enough experience in EQ. Third, that a speaker presentation is somehow preferable or ideal, doesn't make sense to me. Recordings vary a lot in their presentation, and very few modern recordings (since the ping-pong days of early stereo or 60's psychedelia) have an unrealistic presentation on headphones. Speakers, headphones, or anything else make a facsimile of whatever the original "stage" was, so there you are.Personally, I've purchased several flagship headphones and made them far more enjoyable with EQ. And we shouldn't forget that there are audiophiles who are serious about sound but seriously short of cash. You can buy an AKG K553 from Massdrop for $119 USD, and it sounds excellent out of the box. With a little more effort in equalization, a user with no extra funds can achieve a really first-class presentation with good musical tonality. Every aspect of the sound is addressable, directly or indirectly. There is no aspect of the sound that's not addressable.
Fiddling a bit with EQ is not guaranteed to fix soundstage. Phase discrepancies may also be present, but EQ will not fix that. By that token, physical modding is no panacea either. Stuffing things into cups can often reduce reflections and resonances, which indirectly affects the perceived FR. If it's a very tight stuffing, then you might start affecting the acoustic impedance of the driver as well as effective cup volume, and then it's a different ballgame. Mass loading/dampening of the driver/baffle can potentially lower distortion.
I never expected it myself, since it's counter-intuitive. But once a person figures it out and stops trying to just flatten the sound, they might be successful. The key is looking for the worst emphases and suckouts and compensating those without changing nearby frequencies (parametric EQ does that). Then the last step is fixing midrange colorations, but unless those are severe, they won't be a huge factor.
Here's page one of 7 pages of EQ's for 130-plus headphones. Soundstage and clarity was improved greatly for most of these. I wasn't able to get completely satisfactory results for a handful of these, but it's a tiny minority and more work would have gotten a better result. The thing about phase and other issues is, while EQ does not directly fix that, EQ can reduce or increase areas where the problems are most prominent due to the strength of the frequency response in those areas, and thus the overall sound improves as an indirect result. I've been at this long enough to know very well how it works, and the results can surprise you. http://dalethorn.com/Audioforge_01.html