Monitor headphones and that says it all. At first, you hear too much too much and the brain gets tired. You can hear the singer slapping his lips, the creaking of his fingers on the strings, the clicking of a bow and much more that an ordinary citizen would be better off not hearing. In this regard, cheap "ears" that give a blurry sound picture, but do not allow you to hear sound artifacts - look better. When I bought studio monitors for recording, I thought that music would sound great on them, it sounds great, but . Here, what you have been listening to for several years also plays an important role . the ear also gets used to it. Good or bad is a very subjective concept. After all, a person does not like objects, a person likes emotions when interacting with objects, or the prospect that emotions will be. I read unflattering remarks about the 280s. The fact is that after a "run" of 40-70 hours, the shortcomings all go away. The ear pads are crumpled and stop squeaking. The bow relaxes and the headphones stop pressing on the ears. You can straighten the bow yourself a little so that your ears do not press. All sound artifacts disappear. Those who complained about the lack of bass simply do not have such a source to rock 64-ohm headphones. There is bass. Plays great. Faster will take out the brain than there will be an overload of the headphones on the bass. The only drawback is that with a sharp change in sound, the bottoms seem to creep onto the middle ones, but this is due to the inertia of 40 mm. membranes in emitters and is inherent in all "burdocks".
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