Portable DACs. How to put yourself at ease
Portable DACs are inconvenient to use because they hang on a smartphone’s wire, and when in a pocket, they can just scratch its back and front surfaces. I wondered how to solve this problem.
Portable DACs are inconvenient to use because they hang on a smartphone’s wire, and when in a pocket, they can just scratch its back and front surfaces. I wondered how to solve this problem.
The number of earphones around is just way too much. The mere Chinese all together seem to produce a whole new model a day. Therefore, I’m starting to adhere even more strictly to the rule of writing only about good and very good earphones and not writing about bad ones. And I’ll break this rule right away: today I’m gonna talking not about good, not about very good earphones, but about absolutely outstanding, exceptional earphones.
Even before the release of the excellent ZERO:RED, Truthear became known for two other models, NOVA and HEXA. We’ll talk about NOVA sometime later, yet about HEXA right now, since there is plenty to talk about here.
I dropped into the Kennerton office, and they’ve got some specialties: closed-back Arkona and open-back Vinneta. Both headphones models use a new driver. I immediately dragged them home to write a review. Today we’ll talk about Arkona, closed-back planar headphones for $3,277.
User-unfriendly, poorly documented engineering marvel. Consider the following text as an attempt to write coherently about the ADC itself, as well as the process of using it. It’s sort of a loose (and certainly incomplete) user manual if you like.
This review matters for me a lot because it’s my first one of a kind: the very first review of a sound source that I would never have intended to write if it hadn’t been for Hidizs, which suddenly offered me to test their portable DAC.