There's more to Fujiya Avic headphone festivals than drinks with the mates. TE100, the fruit of a partnership between FitEar and Fostex, will be on display. It is a dynamic/balanced armature hybrid with what looks like a metal treble tube.
Read moreAya: FitEar's first 3D-printed production earphone
Aya is FitEar's latest custom earphone. It was released just yesterday. It's got balanced armature drivers inside, and it comes in black, with a black cable, and all that comes in a black Penguin box.
You can find out more information about it here (Japanese).
The big news is that it is the company's first 3D-printed earphone.
Why has it taken FitEar so long to release a 3D-printed earphone? Put simply, FitEar release products, and technologies at their own pace, when they feel they are ready. And the process by which they arrived at today's fully 3D-printed custom earphones was fraught with hardware and software issues.
Mr. Suyama's lengthy Facebook harangue on the subject of German-made, German-engineered printers and support is worth the read, even in machine translation. And if you're a fan of anime, well, so, too, is Mr. Suyama. And he's got some leggy anime renditions of Aya in a China Dress. there's also a panda.
Otukaresama deshita FitEar!
Read moreResetting the expectations for the mini-review: FitEar fitear at AV Watch
Poring over nutritional information won't tell you what your favourite hamburger will taste like. Neither will reading AV Watch (Japanese) give you a real idea of a product's sound, or worth.
That said, yesterday's AV Watch "mini review" of the FitEar fitear (about which I jingled early this year) makes my longest reviews at ohm read like jingles. In fact, it makes my Headfonia reviews read like 'mini reviews'.
Still, AV Watch use a lot of space to say very little:
1. FitEar fitear's driver count is a secret (like Parterre)
2. new, compact design and fit
3. strong, direct sound with sharp transients
4. fitear helps you rediscover your music
The rest of the review is basic audiophile jargon and memes. As useless as it may be as an audio review of the earphone, it's a long wind up that re-imagines the word 'mini'.
acrylic earphones - shouty upper treble
Yesterday, I was asked the following question by a member of Head-Fi with whom I had been having an ongoing discussion about the Vorzüge PURE II headphone amplifier.
Here is what I have to say:
1. The combination of balanced armature earphones and acrylic shells do not cause shouty upper treble.
2. Never trust what representatives of certain companies/technologies say about competing companies/technologies.
NOTE: My review of the FitEar ToGo!334 is at TouchMyApps. My review of the Earsonics S-EM6 is at Headfonia.
Both earphones are good. Only one is great. That is the ToGo!334. What I love most about it isn't its sound, though it is very good; it is FitEar's incessant drive for perfection. Clean shells, clean wiring, strong cables, excellent use of both acrylic and titanium in the output tubes- these are tenets of the FitEar philosophy.
The S-EM6 is more moody, has lusher vocals, and, I feel, is more suited to jazz, vocalists, folk, and certain live music. It fits less well than the ToGo!334, has fiddlier ear pieces, and isn't made to the same exacting standards. Atomistically, I vastly prefer its moodiness for certain music. The S-EM6 may not be as clean sounding in certain frequencies, but it is more fun than the ToGo!334 for certain types of music.
But holistically, if I were to slap down +1.000- USD on an earphone, it would be one that inspired me from both a sound and a build perspective. Currently, ToGo!334 is hard to find. I hear from some people that it has a waiting list. The good news is that if you ever decide to sell it, you likely can recoup all of the costs. Those are the marks of a good investment.
Certain FitEar earphones hold their value very well. But if it came down to sound preference only, I'd probably side with S-EM6. That is personal. But my favourite Earsonics is the SM64. My favourite universal of all time is probably the Grado GR10, whose beautiful shiny body and clean, yet foot-tapping sound mates well with almost every of my favourite albums. It's also a LOT less expensive than the other two options.
As for CIEMs sounding shouty, they can. But that has nothing to do with balanced armatures. Ditto acrylic. It's part and parcel of the acoustic philosophy to which the manufacturer adheres. First: CIEM demos use universal tips for which they were not designed. Second: universal type earphones engage neither the outer nor the inner ear in the same way as customs. Demos will never sound exactly like the final products. They may, in fact, sound quite different. This is an unsolvable problem with CIEM earphones.
Finally, never take a representative of a certain company at her word. Her job is to convince you to buy the things her company make. And she will do her best to convince you that the technologies her company produce are best.
It is possible that they may be. It is just as possible that she is blowing wind up your ass.
Headfonia: FitEar MH335DW & Private 435
FitEar's MH335DW and Private 435 are excellent earphones, each with a completely different person in mind. Check out Headfonia for my full review of them.
New from FitEar: Gundam and 3D printing
"April's Fool!" went Mr. Suyama between mouthfuls of tasteless Japanese beer at the 2014 Mook お疲れ様会. Before our eyes, he dangled a tiny gatling gun fitted with an earphone. Each of its barrels was, as you may have guessed, made of that FitEar precious metal, titanium. Every angle, every barrel, every hard edge projected the singular image on the minds of everyone at the table: Gundam.
Read more