Sennheiser HD800 Headphones With Cardas Audio Cable
Add in the must-have Cardas Audio cable and they're a screaming audio bargain. Review By Phil Gold
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Sennheiser has thrown
down the gauntlet with their new HD800 phones. They are challenging all
comers to the crown of best of breed. And I take it as a personal
challenge too. Can they wean me away from my long term allegiance to rival
AKG? Can they challenge the supremacy of electrostatic phones with their
dynamic design? How do they compare to the superb custom fit canal
earphones from Ultimate Ears (UE-10Pro)? Will people pay well into four
figures for headphones anyway? All this and more in this month’s
exciting installment of the headphone challenge.
All phones have their weaknesses. For the
AKG K701 (as reviewed
here), the imaging falls short of the superb standards set by the
exotic AKG K1000 (as
reviewed here) ear speakers, and the deep bass response, though
tuneful, is a little shy of ideal. The UE-10Pro does better in both of
these areas, but is clearly a little rolled off on top and not as fast a
transducer as I would like. The older and now alas unobtainable AKG K1000
is an impractical beast, requiring a speaker output to drive properly. But
it images gloriously and is comfortable for long periods, although you do
rather look like an alien is performing a brain probe on you as you
listen. These three are the best phones I have heard to date, and I keep
them all to hand. You’ll notice no mention of many people’s favorite,
the Sennheiser HD650 (as
reviewed here). I have no room in my collection for uncomfortable
headphones however well they might sound. I’ve always felt like my head
was in a vice with the HD650, and its junior siblings, and I have also
found the sound to be uninvolving. I have comfort issues with the high end
Grados too. Now I have enjoyed the sound from various Stax electrostatics
over the years, but they require special amplifiers to drive them and
never really satisfy my yen for realistic dynamics. Sure, I love the
resolution and the tone color, but where is the orchestral weight when you
need it, and where is the deep bass?
So, happy as I am with the UE10Pro, K1000
and K701, I’m always on the lookout for something better, something that
will give me the same feeling of involvement as my reference speakers, and
something that I can wear comfortably during long listening sessions.
I have a feeling that somewhere off in
Sennheiser HQ, there’s someone else who feels the same as I do, that
feels the same frustrations with headphones as me, but the difference is,
he can do something about it. Whoever that guy is, he deserves all the
kudos, because Sennheiser has hit a home run. The HD 800 is the closest
thing to perfect headphones I have ever come across. Rather than refining
the HD650 to give us perhaps marginal improvements, Sennheiser has
developed an entirely new design, allowing the best ideas from Sony, AKG
and others to percolate through their labs and then making some radical
new advances of their own.
Let me tell you about those new ideas.
Talkin' Transducers
First,
let’s talk about transducer. Sennheiser has developed a ring shaped
transducer to provide a solid extended bass response but without the usual
eigenmode distortions at high frequencies that accompany more conventional
circular or conical drivers. The ring has a diameter of 56 mm, the
aluminum coil 40 mm and the magnet system 42 mm, all the largest of their
type. The aluminum windings, just 42 micrometers thick, are hand wound
three and a half layers thick for a total of 98 windings in a 6mmm gap.
Normally, the driver would be parallel to
the side of the head, but learning lessons in imaging from the AKG K1000,
the driver here is held at an offset angle to the head of around 15
degrees so that the sound comes from a position ahead of the ears, more
like real life.
Such large drivers and the need to position
them at an angle and away from the ears means the HD800 are of necessity
large phones. To keep the weight down but the rigidity of the driver
mounting high, Sennheiser has resorted to some exotic lightweight
materials. They selected Japanese Alcantra for the earpads, while a
lightweight stainless steel mesh protects the drivers without affecting
the sound. The casing is made of an ultra rigid plastic, Leona, to
minimize vibration. The padded metal headband incorporates an inner
damping element and provides adjustment for size and angle. It weighs a
hefty 330gm (11.6 ounces), but is very comfortable even for long listening
sessions. As an open design, it doesn’t heat up around the ears as much
as closed models, and the Alcantra feels soft and luxurious. The pressure
on the ears is very much lower than earlier Sennheiser high end phones. To
my mind, the radical improvement in comfort levels is reason enough to be
excited about these phones, since Sennheiser already had a good handle on
the sound. Luckily for us, the sound is a quantum leap better than the
HD650 offered, so there are two reasons to start jumping up and down. On
the other hand, the price has more than doubled, so we’d better take a
good listen to the HD800 before we can start talking about value for
money.
The Comparo
The Sennheisers sound more like the fabled AKG
K1000 ear speakers than any other phones I could lay my hands on - open
airy and three dimensional in their imaging. But they go a lot further
than that classic design. The level of resolution is considerably greater,
the bass extends far lower and most importantly, the frequency response
isn’t tipped up. It’s balanced across an enormous range of
frequencies, so that they sound much more like speakers than traditional
headphones. There’s an ease about them that reminds me not just of
speakers in general, but great wide range speakers to boot. In fact you
tend to forget about them and get really drawn in by the music instead.
Mission accomplished.
Now there are phones with a superior bass
response, and if you’re interested, I’m sure Grado would like to
introduce you to their high achievers. There are also phones with even
higher levels of resolution – think high end electrostatics from Stax.
The K1000 still does the best job with image size and depth, by virtue of
holding the earpieces even further from the ear and having greater
adjustability than the HD800. So each of these designs can best the HD800
in a particular area, but none strikes a better balance through the whole
range of attributes you’re looking for, and dynamically, the Sennheiser
has them all beat.
Like
all the very best components, the HD800 doesn’t favor one type of music
over another. It excels in solo piano, pop, jazz, folk, chamber music,
opera, spoken voice. In fact the only area where I cannot tell you it does
really well is country music. Poppa don’t allow no country music
‘round here, so I have no evidence one way or the other. Are
they worth the price of admission? A resounding yes, just as the Ultimate
Ears UE-10Pro and AKG K701 before them, my previous references. They win
for sound quality, comfort and superb physical design.
But before you rush out to buy them, I have
one caveat. You won’t get the kind of performance I’ve been talking
about out of the box. You won’t get it by running them in for several
hundred hours either. You’ll only truly hear what these babies are
capable of if you replace the nice looking black mesh covered cables with
some suitable after market replacement cables. It’s a similar story with
many components you buy – the power cord that comes in the box doesn’t
tell you the full story. I tried a new replacement cable from George
Cardas at Cardas Audio, a simple plug in replacement which makes a world
of difference. Other vendors have their own upgrades available by now, but
I can only vouch for the Cardas cable. Throw in the
cable upgrade and you’re going to need to lay out over $1600, but
there’s no speaker that can touch them for much under ten grand, so
they’re a screaming bargain.
Specifications
Type: Headphones
Transducer: Dynamic, open
Ear Coupling: Circumaural
Frequency Response: 14 Hz to 44 kHz (-3dB)
Nominal Impedance: 300ohms
Sound Pressure Level: 102 dB (1 Vrms at 1kHz)
Harmonic Distortion: < 0.02% (1 kHz, 1 Vrms)
Weight (without cable): Approx. 330 g
Contact Pressure: Approx. 3.4 N ± 0.3 N
Connecting Cable: Silver-plated, oxygen-free (OFC) copper cable Kevlar
reinforced
Cable Length 3 meters
Jack plug: 0.25-inch (6.3 mm) stereo
Warranty: Two years
Price: $1399.95
Cardas Headphone Cable for the HD800
Available in various lengths and terminations, balanced and unbalanced.
Review sample 10 foot with 0.25-inch plug $286
Company Information
Sennheiser Electronic Gmbh & Co
AM Labor 1
30910 Wedemark
Germany
Sennheiser USA
1 Enterprise Drive
Old Lyme
Connecticut 06371
E-mail: info@sennheiserusa.com
Cardas Audio
480 11th Street, S.E.
Bandon
Oregon 97411
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