Good Buy - Infrared Wireless Headphones Review



by Benjamin Diaz


I play and compose songs for a hobby. That isn't the case with one of these Sony headphones.

I am no audiophile, however I do listen to songs all day long while at the office. The quality of sound is way better when listing to songs and Hulu, as you can listen to much more detail in the sounds. They're truly comfy too. Now I'm able to leave the screaming to dad and get my work done.

Overall if you're contemplating buying these do it now! Listening exhaustion is minimal at reasonable listeing volume.

Decent phones for $21.57, if you don't have a small head or an extra sensestive office mate. I choose to try it out.

My hatsize if about 7.25, I have used these occaisionally a couple of months and my ears/head get sore after 1-2 hours. They do muffle exterior noise well, but if you touch or move the very first 2 feet or so of cord you'll be able to hear it in the left earcup. It comes with adapter to help you use with CD/MP3 player or your house stereo that takes a bigger input. It sounds like a radio on low volume. These infrared wireless headphones are the most useful I ever had. My first impression was these things are huge!

These dull the sound of jackhammers to a tolerable degree, are comfy, have a cord of sufficient length to move around my workplace and have sound quality that's all right for somebody who's not an audiophile.

I've heard background stuff in songs I didn't know were there. Outstanding construction! These headphone also have a cord that's very long. They're fairly comfy however they could be more comfortable across the top but round the ears they're nearly ideal. The "movie/music" switch doesn't do anything whatsoever to the sound. The bass reaches about 30Hz (-3dB point), while sounding more full and effortless at 40Hz. Kudos to Sony for the Sony MDR-XD200 Stereo Headphones. I purchased these for my 3 year old and 15 months to use with their portable dvd player on our vacation. According to other reviews, I had been hopeful I had found an inexpensive decent-quality set of headphones. Normal headphones either trigger feedback (a frustrating whistling sound) from the assistive hearing devices or require that the assistive hearing devices be totally eliminated in order to use the headphones. Gone are the days you was previously able to enter an outlet and try on a number of different pairs and use the right discernment on what sounded great for the cash. TV ears wasn't what I anticipated.

I put them on for hours while working and end up forgetting I am wearing them so comfortable enough.




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