jpr62902
Jeanclaude Spam Banhammer
The Mrs. wants a pair -- mostly for air travel. Anyone have a recommendation? These seem good: http://www.monoprice.com/Product/?p...rtby=&period=&rating=&seq=1&format=4#feedback
I own several pairs. Probably 5 or 6? Sorry, no clue what model numbers of each:
Over the ear: Bose. They are excellent. No other way to describe them.
On the ear: Bose. Semi-Compact, not small but smaller than the original Bose. Excellent.
On the ear: Sennheizer. They are Excellent. Bonus is they are tiny & light. Downside is the battery is on a wire that you clip into a pocket or on a shirt. I still love them. But I prefer the Bose most times.
On the ear: Radio Shack (also sold by many other brand names). They work, they look and feel cheap, but they are light weight, the sound canceling is not as good as many others I've tried.
In the ear: SONY meh. Not a fan of the in the ear/ear bud style stuff. They do work. The sound canceling algorithms are not as advanced as either the Bose or Sennheizer. Probably better than the Radio Shack.
I have some others, can't think of the brands. Those 5 have been used the most. Probably the 2 used most often: Bose semi-compact On the Ear and the Sennheizer On the Ear compacts. Honestly if you want to spend the money 1 time, buy the Bose. I'm generally NOT a big fan of Bose, in fact I don't like their speakers or their radios. But for sound canceling headphones, they are the best, period, bar none. You won't regret owning them and they are worth the money.
If you want tiny "on the ear" compacts instead of the larger "over the ear" then there is the Sennheizer stuff. Its also got excellent sound and excellent noise cancellation. Bose makes a semi-compact version also, not as small as the Sennheizer, but smaller than the larger Bose.
For travel something that is smaller is often better. Not necessarily tiny. But big headphones get in the way if you are resting your head, they also can get hot and can get heavy. Look for REAL LEATHER if you get 'over the ear' style because that will breath better than rubber/synthetics.
Each company uses its own, proprietary, sound canceling system. Each system is slightly different. Some are much better than others. User reviews are worthless if the user who wrote the review does not test them against other brands in actual and similar conditions over longer periods. A 60 second in store test, or while sitting on the porch for 30 minutes reading is very different than a 4 to 6 hour flight. Are they still comfortable after 1 hour, 2 hours, 4 hours??? Are they hot as hell and is sweat dripping off your ears??? Does the algorithm really work well, or just enough to silence the store nose when you try them?
Thanks for this info, Bob. And I agree about the reviews. I read some of the reviews for the Monoprice headphones, and they can be ridiculous. Like, "I don't like these headphones because they smell bad" ridiculous. On the other hand, if a person has used them for a year, I'm gonna give that opinion some credence.
As for the Bose, they're a little pricey -- I doubt the better half would truly appreciate the quality, let alone understand the price.
I owned a few bose . over the ears is what I get. the replacement warranty is good.wouldn't recommend something like motocross use. I can't compare with others because I never owned any. wouldn't you have to own and use to compare?
oh,i did buy one $35 one . Don't know the brand. Waste of money. cords are a hassle.
AGREED. For LOUD noises like motorcycles and tractors and gunshots the noise canceling headphones are worthless. They are not designed to reduce dangerous noise levels down to safe levels.
Shooting muffs, ear plugs, etc are designed to reduced the unsafe noise levels down to safe levels. Noise canceling headphones are designed to intercept common annoying noises and alter them so they are muffled/partially eliminated. So the low frequency noises of a car, truck, airplane cabin are reduced and or masked over with an acceptable white noise.
Stihl makes a muff for excessive noise that has a radio built into them. There is also a jack for connecting to your iPod/iPhone. Between the muffling of the external noise and the music, you can probably muffle the drone of even the most expressive ambulance chaser.Bob, do the headphones you recommended cancel out conversation with lawyers?