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flakiness 2 hours ago

A tangential question: What are the best bang per buck headphones these days (preferably wireless)? Not earbuds, but over-the-head headphones. Tell me your favorites.

(The internet is so polluted that I cannot find any reliable recommendation today so I'm doing a mini "ask HN" here.)

LorenDB an hour ago | parent | next [-]

I have had a pair of the Tozo HT3 for a few months now. Not the most comfortable cans ever, but as low as $30 for wireless + low latency mode + decent ANC is a pretty good deal IMO.

janfoeh 40 minutes ago | parent [-]

Another vote for the HT3. My wife and I have one each, and we are perfectly content with them — nice battery life, decent build quality, good connection to multiple (two?) sources.

The ANC is not in the same league as a $300 pair, but one certainly would not expect them to.

timothyduong 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Wireless:

- Top tier general: sennheiser Hbd 630

- good enough: sennheiser momentum 4 (affordable)

- good ANC and “bassy”: Sony xm5/xm6 (‘muddy’ for some)

- I like the Bose ANC profile: Bose QC2

All of them have bad microphones (worse than wired ear pods)

All of them have good to great ANC

All of them are wireless

If you need a good mic then get dedicated headset for calls. Otherwise settle for “ok”

I didn’t include bathys/marklevin cause the new senn 630 outplay them on all fronts.

bloggie 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I found this forum last year https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php which opens the door up to a high number of lower cost manufacturers making very high quality products. although the forum audience (audiophiles) generally eschew wireless products and prefer open backed (loud for everyone else and no noise cancelling) headphones, there are all kinds of products discussed.

bwv848 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Best bang for the buck in terms of sound quality is probably the Hifiman HE400SE, which is less than $100, the AKG K701 and Sennheiser HD6XX, which are about $200. The catch is that you need a proper setup to drive them. But to be honest, getting the tuning you like that suits the music is more important.

outlore 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Bose Quietcomfort (i have the 2nd gen ultra now but I've owned other models too) live up to their name for comfort. Very lightweight and the earcups are large enough that they don't pinch. They may not have the best ANC or featureset, but I enjoy mine immensely

ohmahjong 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I don't know exactly how to measure bang for buck, but my Sony XM4s have been holding up well, sound good, are decently comfortable for a day's work, the battery life is good, etc.

They do have some annoyances like not always sleeping correctly when left connected to my laptop, but overall they are easy to recommend

robotswantdata 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

any ANC soundcore (anker) headphones or TEMU if you fancy rolling the dice. A colleague got a clone of the Sony 1000xm4, they sounded and look very similar.

For all day online calls, Jabra evolve2 65 are hard to beat for the price.

vorpalhex 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

What is your main use case?

Conference calls? Get soundcores.

Actual music? Buy proper open backs and a DAC.

adolph 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Any thoughts on the Ploopy?

https://ploopy.co/headphones/

drcongo 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Those are definitely not what you want for anything other than actual music production - they're designed for a flat frequency response which is really useful when mixing music, but awful for anything else.

bigyabai 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

If you want to go cheap and don't want ANC (eg. open back headphones) then there's a lot of good reference/studio headphones around. I have a wired Audio Technica M40X for home use and a wireless pair of M20X for travel; both are great in a quieter environment.

drcongo 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

The two sibling comments were good suggestions. I have Sony XM3s that have been going strong for 6 years, sound superb, and have IMHO better noise cancellation than Bose.

For my kids I got Anker Soundcores, and for the price they are astonishingly good.

Ignore the thing about open-backs though, I have some extremely high end Grado open-backs and barely use them. My primary hobby outside of work is making music and I have a dedicated studio at home with expensive sound damping / proofing - the only reason to ever wear the Grados is if I'm going to be wearing them for hours on end. Even then, the Sonys are comfortable enough that I've never reached a fatigue point in them.