Physically Comfortable Headphones


I anticipate that in the near future, I will have a greater dependance on headphone listening. I have a separate listening room at this time, and do not have to worry about affecting others as I listen, even into the night. But if/when we downsize, I am almost certain to not have this luxury again. 

I like headphones. But they never seem to like me. I can't find one that I don't want to rip off my head within a half-hour. My head is probably a bit bigger sized than average, but not outrageous. My temples, the source (or at least, location) for my frequent headaches, are sensitive to pressure. My ears get really hot really quickly.

I have owned Grado G1000's, Audeze LCD-2's, Meze 99's, Sennheiser 650's, Stax SR 80's, and the most comfortable of them all, the Audio Technica Air ATH AD700's. And while the AT 700's are the most physically comfortable, the sound is too thin, and not good enough for front line music listening. 

Does anyone know of headphones that fit slightly larger headed people? That have a lower "clamp-force" around the temples? I favor a fuller sound, with good bass, like my Audeze LCD-2's (pre-fazor). My budget is probably around $1500 or less.

Thanks for any suggestions...

David 

dtorc

Showing 1 response by snilf

Here’s a third recommendation for HiFiMan’s big head designs—in my case, the HE 1000. They LOOK massive and awkward, but they’re exquisitely comfortable, very open-sounding (and sound-permeable: others can hear you, and you will hear ambient sounds in the environment), really deep and natural bass, extremely "fast" (those nanometer membranes, I guess) and transparent...I’ve owned a lot of headphones over more than 50 years, including STAX, and this will be my endgame pair. Of course, there’s a cost—namely, cost! They’re ridiculously expensive. I’m guessing the Arya are similar in comfort at least (very likely in SQ as well; I got my HE1000s from a friend in the biz; would never have spent so much on headphones otherwise).

FWIW, I also love the Headroom headphone amp. It eats batteries, but the cross channel processing circuit is a very subtle wonder. You know that feeling when one channel goes out while wearing headphones? Like your head suddenly got cleaved in two, or your hearing went out completely on one side? With the Headroom circuit engaged, disconnecting one channel sounds much more like what it would sound like with speakers: you lose one channel, yes, but you still have a sense of three dimensional space. This effect contributes to the realism of headphone listening in a magical way.