Search Results for “Fukubukuro” – Music For The Masses https://www.audioreviews.org Music For The Masses Fri, 21 Apr 2023 04:14:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://www.audioreviews.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-audioreviews.org-rd-no-bkgrd-1-32x32.png Search Results for “Fukubukuro” – Music For The Masses https://www.audioreviews.org 32 32 NiceHCK F1 Review – Bandwagonesque https://www.audioreviews.org/nicehck-f1-review-jk/ https://www.audioreviews.org/nicehck-f1-review-jk/#respond Thu, 23 Mar 2023 17:59:52 +0000 https://www.audioreviews.org/?p=62825 The $120 NiceHCK F1 is a well-resolving planar magnetic earphone that follows the current trend. It essentially sounds like my

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The $120 NiceHCK F1 is a well-resolving planar magnetic earphone that follows the current trend. It essentially sounds like my “modded” LETSHUOER S12.

PROS

  • Very good midrange
  • Superb haptic
  • Great cable

CONS

  • Bass could be more composed
  • Short nozzles
  • Gold filter redundant
  • Generic eartips

The $120 NiceHCK F1 planar magnetic earphone was kindly provided by the NiceHCK Audio Store for my analysis – and I thank them for that. You can purchase it at the NiceHCK Audio Store.

Introduction

NiceHCK are an aliexpress company that made their name with $3 earbuds (before the current inflation) and annual Fukubukuro offerings: a surprise bag (“Wundertüte”) containing a mystery new-release earphone at a discount price. They are also quite renowned for their accessories, first and foremost their earphone cables. Good quality at reasonable prices.

While their iems are always interesting, they have been hit and miss throughout history. We have reviewed quite a few of their products.

NiceHCK iems analyzed by www.audioreviews.org

NiceHCK Bro (Loomis Johnson, Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK DB3 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK DT600 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK EB2 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK EB2S (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK EBX21 (Baskingshark)
NiceHCK EP10 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK EP35 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK Lofty (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK HK6 (Loomis Johnson)
NiceHCK M5 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK M6 (1) (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK M6 (2) (Loomis Johnson)
NiceHCK N3 (Loomis Johnson, Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK NX7 (1) (Loomis Johnson)
NiceHCK NX7 (2) (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK NX7 Pro (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK NX7 MK3 (1) (Loomis Johnson)
NiceHCK NX7 MK3 (2) (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK NX7 MK4 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK P3 (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK X49 (Jürgen Kraus)

Loomis and I, in our sonic youth, had a soft spot for their $12 NiceHCK Bro single DD. And I found their $140 NiceHCK M6 offered a sniff into the world of premium iems – at the time. The company’s most prominent effort was/is the NX7 series that recently culminated in the MK4. M6 and NX7 MK4 suffered from a slow bass, a flaw the F1 avoids.

As NiceHCK’s contribution to the current planar magnetics trend, the F1 is actually a good sounding earphone.

Specifications


Drivers: 14.2 mm planar magnetic
Impedance: 15 Ω
Sensitivity: 100 dB/mW ±1dB
Frequency Range: 20 – 28,000Hz
Cable/Connector: Upscale OCC and Silver-Plated Mixed Cable/2-pin
Plug Options: 3.5 mm/4.4 mm
Tested at: $120
Product Page/Purchase Link: NiceHCK Audio Store

Physical Things and Usability

In the box are the earpieces, a cable, 2 generous sets of silicon eartips, a lavish pleather storage box, a velcro tie, and the paperwork. The OCC silver-plated cable is absolutely gorgeous with a perfect flexibility and probably costs $30-40 by itself.

The rugged earpieces are made of CnC machined aluminum alloy in the tradition of the 2018 NiceHCK M6 for example. Their cylindrical shape is very similar to my beloved Dunu Zen, just a bit smaller.

The generous sets of eartips are generic – they came with all previous MK4 models, too. NiceHCK should make some effort selecting eartips that optimizes the sound of a particular model (ok, ok, Sennheiser does the same).

NiceHCK F1
In the box…
NiceHCK F1
The silver-plated OCC cable is gorgeous. Note the short screw-on nozzles.

The colour combination and faceplate have a retro appeal to me (retro being 2018). The nozzles are a bit short but once I have inserted them deep into my ear canals, they stay i there, and give me a good seal. The shells are comfortable for me over longer listening sessions. Isolation is average.

Just like with many other planars, the F1 are not very sensitive and work best with decent amplification

The NiceHCK M6 gave us a first sniff of the premium segment, back in 2018.

Tonality and Technicalities

Equipment used: MacBook Air | Earstudio HUD 100 (low gain) with AudioQuest JitterBug FMJ |AudioQuest DragonFly Cobalt | transparent stock eartips.
frequency response
The F1’s frequency response graph is not as wiggly as the ones of their competition. That channel imbalance at the tail is not audible.
frequency response
The screw-on filters deliver three different frequency responses.

The NiceHCK F1 comes with three different screw-on tuning filters, silver, black, and gold. Each filter creates a different sonic flavour. The silver filter delivers the most balanced and most realistic musical reproduction and is used for this sound analysis.

The gold filter adds an upper midrange spike that introduces a brightness that is fatiguing to the western ear. And the black filter enriches the lower midrange but leaves a particularly thick bass perception.

The F1 rides on the bandwagon of the the current planar magnetic hype, and it does so actually quite well. In the “olden days” there were two end members of sound signature, “neutral” and “fun”. The first meant the item was analytical and sterile as it lacked bass, and the second referred to a bassy V-shaped signature with recessed vocals.

Updating this terminology to today’s standards means “technical” vs. “agreeable (or musical)”. The NiceHCK F1 straddles the thin line between the two.

The F1’s bass is on the satisfying, robust side with a slightly blurry midbass hump, which is not pounding fatiguingly but rather subtly against my eardrums. A reasonably pleasant but slightly unfocused punch (it could be a bit tighter), which bleeds into the lower midrange. This adds robustness to the sound an contrast to the less bassy Dunu Talos.

The midrange is on the clean, more technical side, but not as lean or analytical as in the LETSHUOER S12 for example. It is richer but also not as sharply etched out and articulate as in the S12 or 7Hz Timeless. With the silver and black filters, the upper midrange is not shouty.

Treble rolls off rather early and is a bit robotic, typical for planar magnetics.

Bringing this all together – the human ear processes the whole frequency spectrum in context – this amounts to a slightly bassy sound with a reasonably well resolving midrange, which allows the listener to turn up the volume without regrets.

In terms of technicalities, the “agreeable/musical” part sacrifices some technical capabilities. The marginally blurry, bleeding bass and the lack of treble extension narrow the stage. Midrange resolution and clarity are very good as long as it is not affected by the bass. Separation and layering are also best in the midrange and treble, but lag behind at the bottom end of the frequency spectrum..

Timbre is a bit on the “planar magnetic” side, which means it is a bit metallic…but still good enough for enjoying acoustic sets.

Apart from the bass, the F1 are very good iems. The LETSHUOER S12, in comparison, has a tighter bass, but leaner mids, and is less “musical”. But with its current “micropore mod” (which removed spice from the S12’s upper midrange and thickened the bass) both sound almost identical (and they have almost the same frequency response). I would not be surprised if S12 and F1 had the same driver, just use different filtering.

The Dunu Talos is less bassy than the F1 and S12, has a much wider stage, and comes across as a bit sharper and spicier in the upper midrange (but there’s always micropore tape). I’d not put a newspaper between the three. In any case does the F1 not need any modding, but possibly some better eartips.

NiceHCK earphone cables analyzed by www.audioreviews.org
NicHCK LitzOCC 4N Litz OCC Copper Earphone Cable (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK C16-5 16 Core Copper Silver Mixed Earphone Cable (Jürgen Kraus) 
NiceHCK Litz 4N Pure Silver Earphone Cable (Jürgen Kraus)
NiceHCK Blocc 5N UPOCC Copper Litz Earphone Cable (Jürgen Kraus)
The NX7 MK4 is an in-house competitor to the F1.

Concluding Remarks

After my criticism of their recent models, NiceHCK have pulled out a good and useful planar-magnetic earphone in the F1. While my analysis may be nitpicking, they are quite enjoyable for recreational listening.

Until next time…keep on listening!

Jürgen Kraus signature


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Gear Of The Year – Our Personal 2020 Favourites https://www.audioreviews.org/gear-of-the-year-2020/ https://www.audioreviews.org/gear-of-the-year-2020/#respond Fri, 01 Jan 2021 06:59:00 +0000 https://www.audioreviews.org/?p=26709 WORK IN PROGRESS: THIS PAGE WILL BE UPDATED AND IMPROVED UNTIL THE END OF THE YEAR...BOOKMARK ME.

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Christmas Tree

Gear of the Year: Just in time for Christmas we list our our personal favourites of 2020 – the portable audio we personally enjoyed most. Note, these are not necessarily the best, but the ones we…you got it. Therefore, these are highly personal, subjective listings. Please be aware we don’t offer reviews for everything we like/we list here (yet).

That Christmas tree on the right is a carryover from last year. It stood in the lobby of the Windsor hotel at the Copacabana in Rio de Janeiro…and it should be a symbolism for looking forward to travelling again. Viva Brazil!

Most of our reviews would have not been possible without our 2020 cooperating partners. We thank:

Acoustic Effect, ADV, Akoustyx, Apos Audio, Azla, Bill Barraugh/Audiotiers, Blon, Cozoy, CVJ, ddHifi, Dekoni, Dunu, EarMen, Earstudio, Hifigo, iBasso, ifi Audio, KBEAR, Keephifi, Moondrop, NiceHCK, Opa Audio Store, Sennheiser, Shenzhenaudio, Shozy, Smabat, Tempotec, Tronsmart, TRN, Vision Ears, V-Moda, Wooeasy Earphones Store, Yaxi, Don’tkillusifweforgotyoujustsendusanotandwefixit. 

For the companies: you can check for your products/yourself in the search field on the right-hand side.

Note: we do not make any money (or getting compensated by products) through the gear we review. No affiliate links, trackers etc. We keep the conflict-of-interest potential as low as possible by attempting to stay at arm’s length.

As to the popularity of our reviews with you, the reader: our top-viewed BLOG POSTS for 2020 were (click to go to the respective article):

  1. Simplified Guide To Silicone Eartips (~13,000 views in early Dec 2020)
  2. Tin Hifi T2 Plus Review
  3. Blon Bl-03 Review
  4. KZ ZSN Pro Review
  5. Blon Bl-05 Beta Photography
  6. Tempotec Sonata HD Pro Review
  7. Moondrop SSR Review
  8. Drop JVC HA-FDX1 Review
  9. Apple Audio Adapter Review
  10. Earphones Of The Year 2019
  11. Sennheiser IE 500 PRO Review
  12. Reversing Starlines Eartips
  13. TRN V90 Review
  14. Moondrop Starfield Review
  15. Sony MH755 Review

Total Number of Blog Posts in 2020: 186

Facebook Group (est. 2020-01-01)| https://www.facebook.com/groups/audioreviews: >5200 members

audioreviews.org

YouTube subscriptions | https://www.youtube.com/c/audioreviews: 660

Our most-watched YouTube Video of 2020:

And yes, this blog grew and grew and grew in 2020. We are now 8 reviewers on 3 continents. Below are our personal favourites of 2020…

Baskingshark…Singapore

My 2020 favourites in the following categories are:

Earphones

$300 – 500 USD:
LZ A7. Provides a mind boggling 10 tuning configs (or more with aftermarket tuning nozzles). It has excellent technicalities, good fit, good isolation, and the best part that surprised me is that the LZ A7 has very natural timbre for a BA/piezo containing tribid (other than the higher treble frequencies handled by the piezo). Most folks would find an ideal sound signature with it, maybe except diehard bassheads. 

LZ A7
LZ A7 earphones.

$200 – 300 USD:
Audiosense T800. It has good technicalities, is “fun sounding” and excellent isolation nearing 30 dB. Even though it contains a BA bass, it sounds like a DD bass due to a vented subwoofer. The T800 may be a bit on the bright side, so it isn’t the best option for treble sensitive folks, but you can use knowles filters, warm sources or eartips to tame the treble.

@ $100 – 200 USD:
TRI I3. Smooth, balanced, grand and coherent despite the weird 1 planar + 1 BA + 1 DD config. It needs amping though, the planars handling the mids are quite power hungry. It has one of the best soundstages at the $100ish region when amped, with sweet planar mids. Treble is safe, bordering on darkish, so maybe not for trebleheads.

KBEAR BElieve“Bearly believable” for a full beryllium set at this price? The KBEAR BElieve sports a smooth and refined U shaped tuning, great technical chops in the mids and treble areas for a single DD. It has good timbre for acoustic instruments but is very hard to drive, as per the 98 dB sensitivity. It sounds muddy, congested and slow in the bass with a low powered source, but scales beautifully when optimally amped, so those that don’t intend to get an amp best look elsewhere. With power, the KBEAR BElieve does hit about 70% of the technical performance of the famed DUNU LUNA, at 10% of the price! 

@ Sub $100 USD:
HZSound Heart Mirror. Nice mirror like shells, as per its namesake, it is a neutralish bright set, excellent timbre for acoustic instruments. I like how it manages to get a forward upper mids without going into harsh or shouty territory, a very fine line to balance. The Heart Mirror has good transients and speed on the driver. Note weight is thin and soundstage is not the best though, and it needs amping to shine, sounds meh from a smartphone. Good set for vocal lovers and timbre lovers, but maybe not so all rounded due to the lack of bass, but it takes to EQ in the bass like a champ.

Favourite earbud for the year:
SMABAT ST105 Black Gold. Neutralish set with subbass and upper mids boost. If you have always looked down on earbuds for not having subbass, think again. The SMABAT ST10S Black Gold has the best subass quantity and extension I’ve ever heard in a bud. It has excellent technicalities, is MMCX
detachable and can be worn over ears or cable down. It needs amping though, as per the 150 ohm impedance. Not to be mixed up with the SMABAT ST10S Black Silver, which is tuned differently (and has lower impedance).

Best lucky bag/Fukubukuro/Mystery bag:
Urbanfun YBF-ISS014 – it is extremely exciting to see whether u get a beryllium vs “noble metal” driver. Or a working versus wonky mmcx. Even newer batches of the Urbanfun have been reported to have QC problems in the audio forums.The Urbanfun can be summed up in this statement by Forrest Gump: “My Mom Always Said Life Was Like A Box Of Urbanfuns. You Never Know What You’re Gonna Get.”

Best price to peformance joke IEM of the year:
TRN golden ears $14,750.00 USD IEM paired with $3400 USD xiaofan ortiz “king of the gods” cable. Mere mortals cannot hope to use these gear if not you’ll be struck down by lightning! I hope the Bellsing BAs inside are also made of gold!

audioreviews
Baskingshark’s bargain bin.

Biodegraded…Vancouver, Canada

Sorry, from me you get stuff that mostly hasn’t been reviewed. In no particular order; and most aren’t new this year.

Digital transports:
Pi2Design Pi2AES (+ Raspberry Pi)
For streaming (via wifi or Ethernet cable) digital music from your computer, you could go cheap and crap like a Chromecast or Airport, brutally expensive like an all-in-one streamer from Naim or PS Audio, or this $US 149 HAT for a Raspberry Pi which will produce excellent quality AES or S/PDIF digital audio to feed into your audiophile DAC. DIY aesthetic & philosophy, audiophile quality, fantastic convenience once you figure out how to set it up (variety of OS solutions, some better than others).

Amps/Preamps:
Ifi Audio Zen Phono RIAA phono preamp
$US 149 for excellent resolution and transients and the ability to work with a wide range of cartridges. Might benefit from an improved power supply such as Ifi’s own iPower, but my jury remains out on that. Audioreviews summary here.

Amp accessories:
GE JAN 5670W vacuum tube
Cheap and widely available true new-old-stock military-surplus tube that works really well as a 6DJ8/6922 preamp tube substitute (great in the Schiit Vali 2).  Nice tight lows, smooth but detailed mids, sparkly highs. 6922 to 5670 adapter required to translate the I/O pin pattern so nothing blows up.

Headphone accessories:
Yaxi pads for Porta Pro / KSC75 / PX-100
Tastefully boost bass and treble while (on the Kosses) lowering the prominent 5kHz peak. And they’re comfortable! Audioreviews summary here.

IEMs:
Drop/JVC HA-FDX1
Champion single-dynamic earphone with great DD timbre and almost BA-fast transients. Slightly boosted in the uppermost mids, heavy in the ears, intermittent availability, but huge bang-for-buck. Audioreviews summaries here and here (note that Loomis isn’t their greatest fan).

Headphones:
Fostex T50RP Mk3 with cheap angled pads and other mods
Closed or semi-open (depending on how much you stuff the cups) planar magnetic phones that with a little effort (see eg here for ideas) can be made both neutral and extended while retaining deep bass and technicalities. Need amp power to perform.

Players:
USB Audio Player Pro
Gets better with every update. Neutron is more configurable, but unnecessarily so. Put this on your Android phone, plug in a USB DAC/amp, and enjoy great lossless sound quality on the go. Equalizer plugins available. Android only though.

audioreviews
ifi Audio Zen RIAA phono preamp.

Earphones of the Year.
Earphones of the Year.

Durwood…Chicago, USA

CCA this year might as well been a lump of coal, it’s only two letters shy of selling your soul. If you want to talk to your boring Uncle Bob, (no offense Bob’s of the world) get yourself an iBasso IT00 or Tin Hifi T2 Plus you knob. Your uncle Bob is the guy who has lots of interesting things to say, but leaves you wondering what did you just listen to today. My only favorites this year were TRN STM who is the punk that your family doesn’t like to talk about and the Shozy Rouge as your killer looking date that likes to party but not shout. Waiting to see if Shozy Form 1.4 is in good form, only thing I decided to buy during the holiday sales storm. BQEYZ Spring 2 was a nice lively upgrade to the BQEYZ Spring 1, but fix that bass man, maybe take some lessons from the Nicehck NX7 Daniel son. Some of my friends from last year are still good folks to have around, Sony MH755, BLON BL03 for sleeping, and TinHifi T4 (I just wish you would hang in my ear longer than a few minutes of sound). Simgot EN700 is a carry over as well. I like a mild V if you can see.

audioreviews.org
BQEYZ Spring 2 on Durwood’s IKEA desk.
Earphones of the Year.

Jürgen Kraus…Calgary, Canada

Blon BL-05s: These are very articulate playing single DDs also appeal to me through their hideous colour. Probably my most used items of the year (together with the JVCs and Shozy Form 1.4 below). Following the footsteps of the popular Blon Bl-03 – the Blon Bl-05s disappeared fast in the big black hole of anti-hype. And for a good reason: they look like the Bl-05, smell like the Bl-05, measure like the Bl-05, but the Bl-05 had been thrown on the market prematurely, and they sucked. The more distinguished audience may have realized that Bl-05 and Bl-05s have different drivers and sound completely different.

Drop JVC HA-FDX01: Hailed as arguably the best single DD on the market until Dunu Luna and Final Audio A8000 took over, this labour of love was originally only available 665 times….which has extended to above 2000 by now while the price dropped to $200. Carryover from 2019. Still my best earphones because of their organic timbre and great resolution.

TRI I3: Planar magnetic. Something totally different. Big and bold sounding yet soothing. Nothing offensive, nothing dull.

Sennheiser IE 400 PRO ($349): The best of their PRO series. Classic Sennheiser quality midrange. Super ergonomics. Nobody will dislike this one.

Shozy Form 1.4 ($199): The Shozy team somehow got their tuning 100% right. The Form 1.4 simply sound appealing to my ears…warm and fuzzy.

Guilty Pleasure: I pull the $70 FiiO FD1 out for the road: nice’n’punchy.

Vision Ears Elysium in the Endgame category. At 2500 EUR hand made by elfs and some Rhine mermaids in Cologne, out of reach for longer than a week (borrowed). Produce vocals better than real life but also melts credit cards. Cymbals as crisp as Swedish bread…

Perversions and Subversions: the Moondrop Spaceship at $20 beats the Moondrop SSR and SSP…less accurate but the better “junk food” for my ears. Moondrop have a history of undercutting their own mid-tier earphones with their budget offerings…we remember the $30 Crescent and the $180 KPE.

Inasmile Cable Protector: Discovery of the year. 20 cents that protect my fraying Apple cables from total breakage.

I still use the Koss PortaPro headphones with Yaxi earpads for video conferencing and listening when I need comfort around my ears. Also great are the Koss KSC75. Grab all of them when you can, they are affordable standard staples. And my standard full-sized cans are still the Sennheiser HD 600.

Tempotec Sonata HD Pro dac/amp dongle ($40): comes at the price of an adapter – but with all possible adapters to connect this little rascal to anything, including iPhones. Good enough to drive any iem. The very best dongles are the $199 EarMen Sparrow run on their balanced output, and the $120 Earstudio HUD100. In terms of larger portable dacs/amps (with integrated battery), I like the $199 ifi Audio Nano BL, the $149 ifi Audio hip-dac, and the $249 EarMen TR-amp. And I don’t think I need a bigger desktop amp.

Question mark of the year: The KBEAR Believe with their Japan sourced Beryllium drivers were too cheap to be true…which was underlined by some competing cheater Be-less Beryllium earphones and doubt seeded by the Dunu competitor. Hey, but the Luna have that Chi-Fi peak…

Personal Disappointment of the year: the continuing Chi-Fi peak between 2 and 4 kHz that kills western eardrums…TRN are leading the charge…the TRN BA8 cuts steel like butter.

Yaxi earpads
Everybody loves Yaxi pads (including Sybil) – and not only on the Koss PortaPro.

Kazi Mahbub Mutakabbir…Munich, Germany

I’ve tried and reviewed more stuff this year than ever, and part of it (actually, most of it) is due to the awful home-arrest that we’ve all succumbed too. Hope things get normal soon, sigh.

IEMs: 

Final E500 ($20): This otherwise “cheap/beater” IEM does one thing better than *anything* under $100 – binaural tracks and gaming. At least it did so until its brethren VR3000 came out, but I’m yet to hear that and that’s got a 4x price tag attached to it. People call the Sony MH755 the best value IEMs, for me it’s the Final E500.

Dunu Studio SA6 ($550): This is a great all-rounder IEM. Great bass for an all-BA IEM, the lower-mids are full and organic whereas upper-mids tread the fine line between forwardness and shoutiness. The treble has good amount of sparkle and air. Great design and accessory pack. Really, hard to pick a fault.

Honorable mentions: Final E5000, Samsung Galaxy Buds, Moondrop Blessing 2, Sony IER-M9, Final FI-BA-SS, Dunu Luna

Headphones:

Koss PortaPro X + Yaxi Pads ($40)Just buy one. Don’t be stingy. Thank me later. 

Sennheiser HD650 ($300): The once and forever king. The HD6XX esp is a no-brainer. Scales better than any headphone I’ve tried.

Honorable Mentions: Hifiman Sundara, Focal Clear, Final D8000

DAPs:

Sony NW-A55 ($200): If your primary need is to run efficient IEMs, look no further. Great ergonomics, actually usable UI, good display, fantastic battery life, and then there’s the MrWalkman mod to turn it even more awesome. The only “budget” DAP I recommend. 

Questyle QP1R ($600): Questyle made the QP1R 6 years ago. It’s still one of the best DAPs out there when it comes to overall dynamics.

Honorable mentions: Cowon Plenue V, iBasso DX160, Sony ZX300

Desktop sources:

YULONG Canary II ($230): One of the best budget all-in-ones I’ve come across. Criminally underrated too which is a royal shame.

Questyle CMA-400i ($800): The all-in-one system I ended up with after countless trials and tribulations. Perfectly aligned to my tastes.

Honorable Mentions: iFi Zen Can, Headamp GSX-Mini

And that’s a wrap. Hopefully 2021 brings us better times.

audioreviews
Yulong Canary II amp with Blon Bl-05s earphones.

KopiOkaya…Singapore

This year there are 8 of us, thus there are more choices for our readers to choose from.

This year also marked the year of COVID-19…. Meaning, people are staying home longer and more often, thus they can listen to their gears on desktop systems other than portable music players and phones. Fortunately, desktop gears are much better and more affordable now.

Desktop DACs:

Denafrips Ares II (US$700): I don’t own one but my friend do. If you like natural, organic sound with a huge, deep, tall soundstage and don’t mind its higher price tag, look no further… This is it! 

Topping E30 (US$130): A nice warm-neutral DAC. It doesn’t sound as natural, as organic or has a huge soundstage like the Ares II but it offers great audio at an affordable price.

Note: Extremely sensitive to the quality of power supply used. Make sure you power it with something decent like the iFi iPower X.

Desktop Amps:

Yulong Canary II (US$250): This is actually a DAC/Amp with a Class A amplification stage. It posseses a warm-neutral sound signature with lots of low-end drive thanks to the Class A topography. Very good value and performance consider this is both a DAC and an amp! 

Topping L30 (US$140): My current reference amp… If you have noticed, so far I don’t have any balanced amp in my list. When I tune earphones, I never tune them in balanced, simply because if it sounds good in single-ended, it should sound even better in balanced… Well, this is usually the case! The L30 is great (for me) because it has a gain REDUCTION switch for IEMs with high sensitivity… Not many headphone amps have such feature. This is a very neutral, clean and transparent amp that doesn’t colour the sound of the source. That’s all I ask for when tuning earphones.

Portable DAC-Amps:

FiiO BTR5 / Shanling UP4 / EarStudio ES100 MK2 / Qudelix 5K (US$120 or less): I don’t want to decide which is better. To me, each has its pros and cons but my point is… acceptable Bluetooth quality listening is finally here! Almost everybody owns a smartphone these days, so why not use it as a music player? Some of you despise this idea but c’mon… A TOTL DAP still runs slower than my $150 Android phone operating on Android 10.

Earphones:

Etymotic ER4XR (US$350): My reference for tuning hybrid earphones. If you are familiar with Etys you should know their earphones have a near-neutral Diffuse Field Target tuning. The “XR” version has slightly more bass. 

Etymotic ER2XR (US$100): Similar to the ER4XR except this uses a single dynamic instead of balanced armature, thus my reference when I tune dynamic earphones. The ER2XR has more natural timbre and punchier bass than ER4XR. You can forget about Moondrop SSR/SSP if you plan to buy one. This is better.

Note: Etymotic earphones are to be worn deep inside the ear canals touching the bone… #Etyheads call “deep insertion”. This can cause discomfort to first time Etymotic users but you will get used to it eventually… I used to hate it but I am OK with it now.

Headphones:

Singapore is too damn warm for headphones, unless using air-conditioning while listening to music… Sorry, I am too cheap for that. Electricity is expensive here.

 

Blog post of the year 2020.

Loomis Johnson…Chicago, USA

TRN STM–$20 wunderkind is not, as Durwood aptly states, a purist’s earphone, and it veers towards sounding over-pixilated and artificial. However, it has that certain toe-tapping rightness that keeps me reaching for it over much pricier “audiophile-tuned” pieces. Did I mention it’s $20?

KBEAR Diamond—you can spend a lot more and get a bigger stage or a richer timbre, but this smooth, highly-resolving single DD is awfully refined for the price, with class-leading coherence and premium aesthetics and build.

Cambridge Melomania TWS—they don’t have ANC, EQ customizability or the bells and whistles of their Apple/Samsung peers, and microphone is sub-standard. However, they sound damn good for wireless buds—and are surprisingly good value at <$99. 9 hour battery life a plus.

Honorable Mentions: Shozy Rouge, Shuoer Tape.

Slater…Cincinnati, USA

Slater is short for “See Ya Later”…and you will see him later…

KZ ZSN Pro review from May 2019…made our top 5 in 2020.

And This Was The Previous Year:

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NiceHCK X49 Review – Fukubukuro 福袋 2020 https://www.audioreviews.org/nicehck-x49-review-jk/ https://www.audioreviews.org/nicehck-x49-review-jk/#respond Thu, 30 Jul 2020 15:22:59 +0000 https://www.audioreviews.org/?p=21782 The NiceHCK X49 is a bright-neutral earphone with a wide but low soundstage, however a decent tonality - a rare find in this class. Great for people who want to experience a more neutral tonality at a small cost.

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Pros — Surprisingly good tonal accuracy; superb low end.

Cons — Small headroom through low soundstage (typical for cylindrical budget earphones); 3.5 kHz peak may be not for everybody.

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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The NiceHCK X49 is a bright-neutral earphone with a wide but low soundstage, however a decent tonality – a rare find in this class. Great for people who want to experience a more neutral tonality at a small cost.

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INTRODUCTION

Fukubukuro (福袋) is Japanese and means lucky bag. It stands for a Japanese New Year custom in which merchants make grab bags filled with unknown random contents and sell them for a substantial discount. NiceHCK have adapted this tradition for the Chinese new year – and their 福袋 attracts curious buyers who hope for a positive surprise in their lucky bag. I am sure the company has sold tons of these NiceHCK X49 on spec. The question is: are the X49 as good as claimed by the company, according to which 20 audiophiles had been selected as testers – who in turn climbed the X49 are as good as a $70 earphone. Well, we find out in the following.

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SPECIFICATIONS

Drivers: single balanced armature
Impedance: 22 Ω
Sensitivity: 110dB/mW
Frequency Range: 20 – 20,000 Hz
Cable: fixed
Tested at: $17
Purchase Link: NiceHCK Store

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PHYSICAL THINGS AND USABILITY

The box contains the bare minimum: the earphones with a velcro band, 3 sets of tips, a shirt clip, and the paperwork. The cable is not detachable and the left strand is marked by a little slider (visible at the centre left top of the photo). The cylindrical shells are made of metal and the haptic is quite good. Comfort, isolation, and seal are standard for this shape. The largest tips worked for me. Considering the low price, I assumed the NiceHCK X49 are meant to work with a plain phone – I used them with my iPhone SE (2016).

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NiceHCK X49

TONALITY AND TECHNICALITIES

My tonal preference and testing practice

My test tracks explained

The tonality of the NiceHCK X49 is neutral- bright.

I did not expect wonders of the sound but was kind of surprised who well the low end performed. It is realistic in that it does not over-extend into the sub-bass (in fact the extension is probably below average compared to its peers), it is articulate and tight….reminiscent of the JVC HA-FDX1, one of my all time favourites. Typical BA driver with not too much extension. So, not for bass lovers however for, hmmm, audiophiles…although audiophiles are people with deep pockets who listen to gear and not to music…ok, the X49 are for people who love music, then. To me, the low end is more linear and flatter than shown on the graph…either my measurements are inaccurate or that 3.5 kHz balances the low end (the human ear hears the whole frequency spectrum in context).

The lower midrange/vocals department is slightly recessed but voices appear to be well sculptured. They are not the richest and appear a bit breathy or nasal at times, but that’s still acceptable. It is that 3.5 kHz peak that attenuates them a bit. The vocals department could do with a bit more body. That 3.5 kHz upper midrange peak can make things a bit harsh at higher volumes – however it adds clarity to the midrange. Both midrange and bass are on the bright neutral side. There is a distinct rolloff in the uppermost midrange and brilliance area and a climb in the lower treble. Cymbals can be a bit splashy.

Treble appears well extended and the high notes resolve reasonably well but cymbals can be a bit splashy.

Stage is reasonably wide, not very deep, and not the tallest. Spatial cues is good. The stage is exactly what you expect from the shape of the shells. Staging (instrument separation/placement and layering) was again surprisingly good. Dynamics is another particularity of this earphone: the punch sounds a bit analog as if the music came from a record player. Timbre/tonal accuracy is another positive surprise but things can get a bit harsh at higher volumes – as mentioned before. This is an earphone for moderate volumes.

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NiceHCK X49


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NiceHCK X49 COMPARED

You find reviews of all of the iems mentioned below here.

Difficult task. Even the $23 KBEAR KS2 is 50% more expensive – and totally different: comparatively bassy and V-shaped. And any vintage <$20 earphone such as the Urbanfun Hifi or Einsear T2 are also V-shaped with a boomy bass. It will be tough to find such a clean tonality in this price range.

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NiceHCK X49


CONCLUDING REMARKS

NiceHCK attempted to offer an audiophile-tuned earphone at a very low price – and they succeeded imo. Anything neutral sounding below $50 is a rarity, and the NiceHCK X49 are cheap enough to act as a stocking stuffer…for yourself. Having enough of V-shaped? Try this one and see whether (diffuse-field) neutral is right for you.

Until next time…keep on listening!

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DISCLAIMER

The X49 were sent to me unsolicited by Jim NiceHCK and I think him for that.

Get the NiceHCK X49 from the NiceHCK Store

Our generic standard disclaimer.

About my measurements.

You find an INDEX of our most relevant technical articles HERE.

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Hill Audio S8 Review – Affordable Boutique Earphone For Everybody https://www.audioreviews.org/hill-audio-s8-boutique-earphone-for-everybody/ https://www.audioreviews.org/hill-audio-s8-boutique-earphone-for-everybody/#comments Mon, 10 Dec 2018 11:01:10 +0000 https://www.audioreviews.org/?p=267 Pros — Wonderful, well-rendered midrange with a natural timbre; spacious soundstage; small and round enough for comfortable fit; classy understatement

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Pros — Wonderful, well-rendered midrange with a natural timbre; spacious soundstage; small and round enough for comfortable fit; classy understatement design; great value.

Cons — Mid bass is a matter of taste; hard to get.

 
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
 
The Hill Audio S8 2BA + 1DD hybrid earphones offer a slightly warm and spacious sound with good bass extension and no treble quirks. They excel by their quality midrange and superb resolution, separation, and layering. A selection of included filters as well as their tip sensitivity offers tuning options that make them palatable to a broad audience from bassheads to fans of classical music and jazz alike.

DISCLAIMER

I was made aware of the Hill Audio S8 by the review of David Hahn from Chi-fiear (where I occasionally publish a second opinion), became interested, and asked Vincent Yeoh, owner of Hill Audio via the Hill Audio Facebook page for a review unit, which he kindly sent me from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Thanks Vincent.

As always, I tested the Hill Audio S8 with a cross section of music that provided a broad coverage of the frequency spectrum, including naturally generated sounds such a voices and classical instruments. My playlist is still growing and improving along with my technical abilities. New is that I am creating my own measurements with the REW software.

The measuring coupler was two pieces of plastic tubing on the end of a Dayton iMM-6 microphone. No compensation or smoothing was applied. These measurements should not be directly compared to other measurements except those done on the same device, for example the ones I will be posting in the future.


INTRODUCTION

You may not have heard of Hill Audio and neither had I a while ago. They are a Malaysian online audio dealer, established in 2016. Hill Audio mainly sell budget earphones to the domestic market but they also partner with OEM & ODM under their own brand name: the Hill Audio S8 is an example. Hill Audio communicate mainly through Instagram and Facebook and don’t have their own website – and they

only sell directly. I saw the same earphone under a different name (Magaosi/HiLisening HLS-S8) in a different packaging and with a lower-end cable at a 50% higher price. You find a competent review of it here.


SPECIFICATIONS

  • Product Name: Hill Audio S8 Hybrid Brand: Hill Audio
  • Model: S8 Hybrid
  • Earphone Type: In-ear
  • Drive Unit: 2 BA +1 DD [2 custom Balanced Armature from China Armature (AMT) + 1 10 mm grapheme Dynamic] hybrid
  • Impedance: 16Ω
  • Sensitivity: 100 +/- 1 dB
  • Rated power: 1mW
  • THD: < 2%
  • Frequency range: 20 – 20000Hz
  • Plug Type: 3.5mm TRS
  • Cable Length: 1.2m
  • Cable Connector: MMCX
  • Remote/Mic: No
  • Price: $60 (at the time of the review; including registered
  • Malaysia airmail shipping worldwide)

Purchase Links: challenging…
Shopee
Email: hillsonicaudio@gmail.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hillsonicaudio

Whatsup: +601136329018


Hill Audio S8  content

PACKAGING AND ACCESSORIES

There was no branded packaging at all. Within the small parcel you will find a pouch containing 3 pairs acoustic filters + silicon eartips set (S/M) + memory foam tips set (S/M/L).


PHYSICAL APPEARANCE, HAPTIC, AND BUILD QUALITY

The earpieces are made of polished aluminum alloy and look and feel very well made. The cable appears to be well constructed, too.


ERGONOMICS, COMFORT, ISOLATION, AND FIT
 

The shells are rounded without any corners and quite thin, with aerodynamics similar to Formula 1 cars. This results in a good fit and comfort but only soso insulation for my specific ears (results may vary).

Hill Audio S8 cable and eartipsHill Audio S8  filters


SOURCE AND EARTIPS

I listened with the iphone 5S with the audioquest dragonfly black attached to it. The largest included white to semi-transparent tips worked well for me.


TONALITY

The Hill Audio S8 come with three pairs of acoustic tuning filters resulting in three different sound signatures: Blue for reference sound; silver for bass boost; black for treble boost. I discuss the sound with the factory-installed blue reference filters. The sound is also strongly tip dependent (when used with my ears; mileage may vary).

Hill Audio S8 frequency responses with different filters

Frequency Responses of the S8 with the Different Filters

The slightly warm sounding Hill Audio S8 has a rather smooth frequency response with no narrow peaks and dips. Consequently, there is no pierce, hardness, harshness, or sibilance: smooth sailing across the whole spectrum.

Hill Audio S8  frequency response with reference filters

Frequency Response with the Blue Reference Filters.

The Hill Audio S8’s low end focuses on the bottom end of the bass sensu stricto [commonly referred to as “mid- bass”…but hey, where are the lower and upper bass?] with the sub-bass being slightly rolled off. The DD produces a gentle low end that is not as tight, focused, and impactful as a BA could. The 55 – 90 Hz hump may be a bit overwhelming to some ears at higher volumes whereas is it quite pleasant at quieter levels. Adding narrow-bore tips brings out the sub-bass while preserving the midrange and sacrificing a bit of the soundstage. They transform the S8 into bass rockets as it adds low-end energy to bass-heavy tracks such Bauhaus’ “Bela Lugosi’s dead” and Queen’s “Another one bites the dust”.

The midrange is a bit recessed but less so with the wide-bore stock tips. In terms of quality, it is absolutely stunning: I have no earphone in my collection in this class with voices so beautifully rendered and with such a natural timbre (the narrow-bore tips move the voices a bit back but they are reasonably intimate with the wide bores). Mids are clean and clear and therefore a bit lean, but not in a bad way. String quartets also sound great and best with the included wide bore-tips: organic with great depth. Most of this kind of music happens in the midrange and treble both of which transition smoothly into each other. The midrange is the star of the earphones and may as well catapult them into competition with higher-priced earphones.

The treble is smooth, reasonably well extended and devoid of unpleasant sonic surprises. Soundstage is spacious with a good depth, and instrument separation and layering are impressive.


SELECT COMPARISONS?
 
The main reason why comparisons are offered is to confirm the asking price and to make sure we don’t buy the same over and over again. This is particularly useful when rolling in the higher-priced categories. In this case, I feel, such detailed comparisons are not necessary as I can confirm this iem is well worth its money and pretty unique in its price range. I love the original, black 2 BA Brainwavz B200 v.1 (~$100): it has a tighter bass compared to the S8 as part of a slimmer, more neutral leaning sound. But the S8’s midrange is superior in my opinion, including timbre, soundstage, separation, layering, resolution…let alone the design, haptic, and build.

I also love the single DD Focal Sphear (~$130), which is also technically less capable than the S8. Adding narrow-bore tips, the S8 rivals the iBasso IT01(~$100) at the low end but is much cleaner and clearer in the midrange.

Hill Audio S8, iBasso IT01 and Brainwavz B200 frequency responses

Here the frequency responses of most of the above mentioned earphones.

I am still generally struggling with assigning monetary value to sound.Therefore, if you are lucky, the Hill Audio S8 may beat your $200 reference – it is in your own eyes. The S8 simply is what it is – and it is quite impressive.

CONCLUDING REMARKS

Hill Audio S8  and geologists

The Hill Audio S8 Hybrid is a stylish, well-built, great sounding earphone that may not be so much of a “hard sell” rather than a “hard buy”. It could be a 5-star contender if it had a slightly drier bass and more forward mids….but this is subjective and, in the end, lies in the eyes of the beholder. With three different filter sets it is quite versatile and caters to a broad range of tastes. Sound sensitivity to the tips used offers another method of fine tuning. I particularly like that the manufacturer found a good balance between the number of drivers and shell size, which results in excellent fit and comfort. The elegantly understated and purist looking S8 is reminiscent of a gemstone on a pearl neckless which makes it also optically appealing to me (I’m a geologist).

In the end, the Hill Audio S8 is its own fukubukuro: as a minimum you get the value for the money you paid, but you may even do much better. Highly recommended!

Hill Audio S8  earpieces

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