A potentially decent set of headphones entirely let down by poorly fitting earcups
Fast; agile sound; Premium feel and build; Control system
Poor fit; Catastrophic loss of bass
A potentially decent set of headphones entirely let down by poorly fitting earcups
Fast; agile sound; Premium feel and build; Control system
Poor fit; Catastrophic loss of bass
The Amiron Wireless won the Zero1 Award 2018 for Wireless Headphones and anyone who puts this pair on will understand why. The audio is detailed, staging is excellent and we found ourselves rediscovering our favourite tracks, sans the wires.
Excellent sound; Comfortable; Sounds good wired as well; Includes cable with in-line remote
Bulky; No ANC; Expensive
For more than a decade, I've been investing in the best and coolest gadgets to add to my travel rig, which is where I most often use headphones. In an Apple-dominated, iPhone X world where wired headphones are becoming a thing of the past, I have taken a look at nearly all of the key players in the...
We recently reviewed another excellent pair of headphones with variable bass response-the $500 Sennheiser HD 630VB . Interestingly, these headphones look like the Amiron Home - like gear better suited for the living room or basement than the subway - but Sennheiser markets the HD 630VB as headphones...
Fantastic, accurate sonic performance with excellent bass depth and superb clarity and detail in the highs; Open design lends a greater sense of space; Exceptionally comfortable
Very expensive; Open design leaks sound outward
We need to get straight to the point here. Beyerdynamic Amiron Home is not exactly a cheap headphone, and it won't be exactly cheap to drive either. At 600 EUR price point, Amiron sits comfortably in the upper midrange to the high end area of headphones.
Soft; Musical Sound; Very well built; Heavenly Comfortable; Good Treble Extension; Tight Bass just slightly north of neutral; Very Clear; Good Ergonomics; Quite revealing
Pretty hard to drive to be loud enough; Premium Quality leads to a premium price
Beyerdynamic has done everything right in terms of sound. The Amiron Wireless is one of the best Bluetooth headsets on the market and would stand as one of the best devices of its kind in its price range, even without its Bluetooth connectivity.
Beyerdynamic is a pretty conservative company, and its sound hasn't really changed all that much over the last decade. I started to sense something was up in 2015 when I reviewed the flagship T 1 second-generation headphone that took the brightness down a smidge.
Designed and made in Germany; Concise and clear sound; Extra comfy
Plastic earcups break the high-end spell
Wireless headphones have been around for years but never quite took off with the audiophile crowd as the limitations of Bluetooth codecs and bandwidth left a lot of audio detail out.
Excellent build quality and comfort; Detailed; dynamic and spacious sound; Sounds just as good wired
Not ideal for travel; Mobile app needs work; Expensive
Really nice headset with superb sound. (Is a far too skeptical / picky person) Manages to handle two units. Do not know how many Bluetooth sources it can store, but two are clearly approved even if you want it to pass three.
price tag is enough to make even the most hardcore music listener do a double take. Which begs the question.. is it worth it Let's take a look.
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