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Good skull induction headphones?

I wanna mix ambient on them and see what it’s like.

Comments

  • Def interested in replies. Been looking for some to rock when I'm biking.

  • For some of us skull induction introduces way too much reverb.

  • I hope you don't like bass.

  • @wim said:
    For some of us skull induction introduces way too much reverb.

    :D

  • edited September 2022

    Shokz OpenRun Pro are a significant improvement on the previous iteration of that top-of-the-range model (Aftershokz Aeropex), despite their more plasticky build; there's an additional bass speaker that substantially improves the sound on ambient mixes, though at the cost of more vibration if you turn the volume up high on anything with a beat or speech. For mixing purposes, you can get a fuller frequency balance by wearing some cheap foam earplugs partway-in (not far enough to make a seal, or the whole thing just turns to mud).

  • Bone conducting headphones are not for music making, leave it for sports and casual music listening in dangerous environment. And do not forget about Bluetooth latency.

    P.S. I love my trakz air and aeropex :p

  • @Dante777 said:
    Bone conducting headphones are not for music making, leave it for sports and casual music listening in dangerous environment. And do not forget about Bluetooth latency.

    So much this. I have a wired set that goes to my Gen 1 iPhone SE that I use for outdoor walks. I also use it in the studio to play backing tracks over while I play flutes to them. It helps to better hear the acoustic instruments to not have closed back cans on. And you don't have to worry about mic bleed like with open backed cans.

    But I would never, ever, attempt to mix with them.

  • @jimhanks said:

    @Dante777 said:
    Bone conducting headphones are not for music making, leave it for sports and casual music listening in dangerous environment. And do not forget about Bluetooth latency.

    So much this. I have a wired set that goes to my Gen 1 iPhone SE that I use for outdoor walks. I also use it in the studio to play backing tracks over while I play flutes to them. It helps to better hear the acoustic instruments to not have closed back cans on. And you don't have to worry about mic bleed like with open backed cans.

    But I would never, ever, attempt to mix with them.

    Yeah but I would. It’s for fun guys

  • @db909 said:

    Yeah but I would. It’s for fun guys

    Well go for it then. If the objective is a mix that sounds the best it can on those headphones, then that'll work. I once mixed a ringtone using my iPhone's external speaker because I knew that was the only place it would get played. Just don't expect that mix to sound good anywhere else. ;-)

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