Sennheiser HD650 and ipod


After reading this was supposed to be a mismatch, I never tried them together. Was just very pleasantly surprised listening to the 650 on iPod Classic version 5.5 and current iPod touch. It played as loud as I wanted and sounded great.
jl35
If you add a portable headphone amp(and some now have built-in DAC's), you will be amazed at the audible improvement. I use a JDS Labs portable headphone amp which is beautiful to look at and operates flawlessly. iPod and iPhone sound bland without it.

Neal
I've been using my 10yr old HD600's more than ever since I picked up a Fiio E12 + L9 cable (for under $140!). I use it with my 160 GB iPod classic that has close to 6000 songs on it. The cable bypasses the pods amp resulting in a very clean and powerful sound. The amp also has a 1-click subtle but effective bass boosting switch that I always leave on. This little amp is slightly larger than my phone. This is why, between the portability, song selection, and sound quality, I've been using my cans more than ever!
Thanks Neal. What is the model number of the JDS? I've been using a Burson for home listening and had not thought of using the 650 with my iPod, so I gave it a try...
A good headphone amp should only help, not hurt.

Glad to hear they sound good as is though as well.

I have Sennheiser Momentum over-ear phones. THese are designed to work better with portable devices than the audiophile Sennheiser models like HD650, and sound wonderful of an Ipod TOuch, for example, but I think even these can benefit from a good amp with a bit more juice than most common portable devices can deliver.
Has anyone tried the ifi nano ican portable? They claim a 70 hour use on one charge...
Sennheiser HD580/600/650 got a rep as hard to drive cans, but they're really not that bad. They're highly efficient (for full-sized open cans), which is good. Then there's the 300-ohms, which is both good (presents an easy load; doesn't demand a lot of current) and bad (your source+headamp must have enough net gain to get where you want to go volume-wise). On the other hand, something like a Grado won't require as much voltage to go loud (because their lower impedance actually drws more current & power form the amp at the same volume), if you can stomach their sound :)

The other reason they got that rep is that they do "scale" their performance with higher-end upstream gear. However, that's more a relic of earlier head-fi days when there were few other high-end headphone options besides Stax. These days, the HD600 series still represents a GREAT value, but they have a low (compared to the best) and hard glass ceiling on their performance, so it's not worth dumping much money into a dedicated HD600/650 system before you should explore other options.
I have a pair of Sennheiser 580s, and I use them with my laptop and iPod frequently and with great success. And by that I mean the mdirange is transparent, the treble is smooth but extended, and the bass is extended and tight, especially for being pushed by whatever tiny module is inside the iPod.

I'm sure they'd sound even better with a good headphone amp in between, but taken on their own merits, the Sennheiser 580/600/650 defy conventional logic and mate well with an iPod.

The same is not true of the headphones of the AKG 240 family. Those *need* a headphone amp.