Shure's experience in the canalphone market has allowed the company to zero in on a nearly ideal design.
Shure's experience in the canalphone market has allowed the company to zero in on a nearly ideal design.
Shure has a long history of making professional audio products. In the late 1990s, the company introduced its first in-ear monitors for use in live-sound situations (performances, studio work, and the like), and when the company adapted these models for use as consumer-grade headphones in the early...
Good design and comfort; Good sound quality
Missing some bass impact; Expensive
To start this off, i did not pay for my pair of 315. If i had payed for them the disappointment would be vast.
Isolation; fit; fast well weighted bass
Honky midrange, splashy treble; Not an easy listening experience
Shure has a long history of making professional audio products. In the late 1990s, the company introduced its first in-ear monitors for use in live-sound situations (performances, studio work, and the like), and when the company adapted these models for use as consumer-grade headphones in the early...
Good design and comfort; Good sound quality
Missing some bass impact; Expensive
The SE315's design and ergonomics are as good as it gets for in-ear-canal headphones without stepping up to custom models. The SE315's sound quality is almost as good as its design, with a neutral balance and great detail, missing only some bass impact and the superior amount of detail found in the...
Shure is a big player in the world of high-end headphones, and for good reason -- the company makes some of the most impressive units in the business. Its SE315 sound-isolating earphones are aimed at people whose budgets can't quite stretch to the all-conquering SE535s, but who want better sound quality than that offered by the entry-level SE115s. You can expect to pay around £180 for the SE315s.
The Shure SE315 earphones offer clear and well-balanced sound that will almost certainly put a grin on your mug. They're not exactly cheap, though.
Excellent sound-isolation capability; generally great sound quality.
Take a while to put on; expensive.
With over 80 years experience in the audio electronics business, Shure has established a solid reputation among the tricky audiophile audience, the SE315's sit in the middle of the company's range.
The SE315s sit at the top of their subset of Shure's earphone range, being the most expensive and - one would hope - best-sounding of the company's single-driver products. Like the rest of Shure's SExx5 products the revamped SE315s improve over the SE310s with a more solid construction, a few design...
Modular design; Great sound quality; Excellent noise isolation
Inconvenient fit; Expensive
The Shure SE315 earphones are very good. They deliver clear, well-balanced sound and will almost certainly put a smile on your face, provided you invest in music that's been encoded to a high standard.
Excellent sound-isolation capability; Generally great sound quality
Take a while to put on; Expensive
We're fans of Shure's sound-isolating earphones, which come with a variety of tips that are capable of almost entirely blocking out all external sound. The sensation can be an odd one, particularly with the expanding foam tips that completely block your ear canal.
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