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picked up some Yamaha HP-1's recently
.
No, they won't replace the HD-6xx's. But they are very nice, especially for 20+ y.o. headphones.
They have the Mario Bellini sig, and I do like the styling. Very lightweight Orthodynamics
that you can listen for extended periods. Usually I don't care for supra-aural's and prefer
circum's , but being so light that you don't notice.
I have them running off the Technics "new class A" integrated amp fed thru the laptop's optical
output to a 24/192 dac. In the early hours, I'm up before "the old bear" and therefore cannot run
the 120Ti's.
Anyway, if you get a chance to try some of these, they are quite good.
Orthodynamic Roundup
https://www.head-fi.org/threads/orth...oundup.111193/
The Mario Bellini headset design, revolutionary for its day, really was as comfortable as it looked, which explains why so many headsets have used a similar arch-and-strap design in the decades since. The magnets could have been twice as big and heavy (one can only imagine the bass output) and the phones would still have felt good. It's difficult today to imagine how much more comfortable the HP-1 was than the massive, head-clamping competition.
ALSO: an interesting article. What's the Most Important Headphone in the History of Headphone Enthusiasm?
https://www.innerfidelity.com/conten...husiasm?page=1
AT's wannabe copy of Senn HD6..'s
.
https://www.theverge.com/2018/7/6/17...nal-headphones
Anytime neutral sound and a sub-$400 price figure in the same discussion, headphone enthusiasts will instinctively point you toward Sennheiser’s long-tenured and universally respected HD 600. It’s no overstatement to say that the R70x are basically Audio-Technica endeavoring to build its own version of the 600s. When I spoke with engineers inside the Japanese company, one of them cited the Sennheiser HD 650 — a close sibling of the 600 — as his all-time favorite headphones, and it was apparent that Audio-Technica measures itself against its bigger German rival.