Solderdude and Astralstorm, it seems you have a hard time comprehending something unless you can see numbers or graphs. What I'm talking about is a concept and a pretty important one despite the silly animal metaphor. Maybe I'll draw you some pictures at some point.
HD800 are certainly what I would call chameleon. Another phone that is like that is the HD650. For a dark headphone it sounds characteristically different from different amps and sources. The HD800 and HD650 also respond quite dramatically to balanced drive... more so than the Hifimans and Audezes that have come through here. Actually I think both those Sennheisers are far more chameleon than the HE-500, LCD-2 r1 or 2.
By the way, how is the term "sweet" defined exactly? I keep on hearing it from a more non-audiophile crowd for treble, I never really got it. Is it supposedly a less dry and airier treble?
Quote from: omegakitty on January 21, 2013, 08:40:31 PMHD800 are certainly what I would call chameleon. Another phone that is like that is the HD650. For a dark headphone it sounds characteristically different from different amps and sources. The HD800 and HD650 also respond quite dramatically to balanced drive... more so than the Hifimans and Audezes that have come through here. Actually I think both those Sennheisers are far more chameleon than the HE-500, LCD-2 r1 or 2. Just try the adapter from balanced to unbalanced on the same amp to check.
And while most DAC ICs do output a balanced signal many of them are converting it to single ended and then using opamp phase splitters to send it back to balanced out on the XLR. Ours is balanced all the way with no conversion to S/E
Bah, I don't want to turn this fun thread into a tirade about the pointlessness of balanced wiring for short interconnects - and why a good amplifier wouldn't care one whit about being fed differential, balanced or unbalanced (assuming it's designed for that topology), much less headphones. Never mind that the difference is not measurable, unless you have a ground loop somewhere.
You mean bridging. It's well known to improve noise floor, might drop even order harmonic distortion too if implemented correctly, improve maximum current output. (3 dB in noise, 6 dB in harmonic distortion. Latter is rarely important, perhaps for some rare orthos.) Quite well-known and measurable. However, the same benefit can be had without actual balanced wiring in the headphones. Not that you shouldn't use it if you have one, but there's no real reason to mod them.