Karen,
What do you mean by dizzy actually? Normally that or fatigue is a comfort or 
sound sensitivity issue.
For example, these days I've very sensitive to frequencies in the mid range and 
mid treble. That's
about 400hz - 1khz and 6khz-10khz. You may want to figure out if your sensitive 
to sound issues in
certain parts of the spectrum. Or perhaps you mean something else. This is just 
my experience with
various people.

Good luck with your search through,
Nick

On 1/14/22 15:10, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Hi  Erica,
The Sony Mdr-7506 headphones have been a staple of audio production for 
honestly decades.  I got my pair in hmmm2004 or 2005.
However, this is a fine example of my personal issue...I cannot use them.
The impedance on this model is 24, and they make me dizzy.
I do have production assistants use them, and in all these years the ear pads 
remain flawless.
That being said, I may be reaching out to  Sony directly, as my e-mail exchange 
with JVC is becoming rather frustrating smiles.
best,
Kare



On Fri, 14 Jan 2022, Erica Peterson wrote:

You may have better luck picking a few common brands and going to the 
manufacturer websites.  Sony, for example, will let you select multiple models 
for comparison across features: 
https://www.sony.ca/en/electronics/headphones/t/headband-headphones

FWIW, about 5 years ago I got a Sony MDR-7506 headset -- admittedly, not based on any 
sort of audiophile specs, but because I'd seen them used in recording studios and figured 
that was a strong point in their favor.  I'm still very happy with it but with two small 
quibbles: (1) the cable doesn't detach, so it would be a pain to replace if I were to 
damage it, and (2) the material covering the pads degrades after a few years.  I just 
replaced the pads with "Wicked Cushions" from Amazon, which are made to fit 
popular headset models.  The Wicked Cushions are great so far.

Erica

‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐

On Friday, January 14th, 2022 at 1:02 AM, Nicholas Krause via talk 
<[email protected]> wrote:

On 2022-01-14 12:50 a.m., Karen Lewellen wrote:

Hi there,

You know something I have a hard time picturing what closed back

actually means.

to my imagination open back means nothing behind my head, which is my

preference. are closed back those behind your head then?

I agree on 32 for impedance..but sometimes they are higher. even with

no amp involved.

Kare

Karen,

Open Backs have open grills or leak sound through the outer part of the

ear cups. They don't isolated sound the way most headphones do. You

don't see them outside of the audiophile market. The problem with

closing or isolating sound is frequency issues basically. Sound stage is

one big improvement on them as you can let the drivers actually breathe.

Most consumer amps in cellphones or whatever can get about 60-90 ohms if

your asking. So anything beyond that is not good. This is a problem for

IEMS in the audiophile market as they have to gear them for cellphones

actually so most are around 32-48 ohms from memory.

Nick

On Thu, 13 Jan 2022, Nicholas Krause wrote:

On 2022-01-13 4:25 p.m., Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:

Hi there,

Fine and interesting list.

To be sure, the idea of noise cancellation, or any variation's is a no,

not just because of the sense of position, but because I have

something

talking in my ears when I use them in this particular setting..no phone

ringing, door bells, or the all important music playing in the

background.

As I have been a radio producer, and professional singer for many many

years, over the ear headphones are the most comfortable, speaking

personally.

I truly dislike earbuds, they tend not to stay in my ears, to put

pressure on my ear canal etc...and the buttons are a no, mic interferes

with the machine.

The most important thing, for this particular set of headphones

though is

A combination of frequency range, sensitivity, impedance, and driver

units...oh and input power.

a few settings in the wrong direction, and the headphones will make me

dizzy..literary.

And those numbers can be device specific, what I will use for my

reading

edge, differs for what I use for production, or music listening, or

whatever.

It is part of why once found I may buy more than one pair.

Cannot fault you for using the same ones since the 80's. Had a set

once

I got from radio shack that I used for more than a decade as well.

Goodness but I miss radio shack.

Kare

Greetings Karen,

I would not find the model in the previous email. However, my two sense

are over ear can mean different things. A current pair of headphones was

stated that but it's more what Hugh was calling something else.

The other things were I normally prefer open backed as it's the only way

to not screw around with frequency issues. I've my reasons. As to

standard closed backs AKG, Sennheiser, Sony are the big good players

from memory. I'm not sure of the site design for your needs so sorry :(.

Your original pair was around 200 dollars from memory and they all

have something good in that price point to my knowledge.

As to weight normally anything under 400 grams is fine for most people.

And for impendance it should be 32 ohms or less if your not using an

actual amp.

Take care,

Nick

On Thu, 13 Jan 2022, D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk wrote:

| From: Karen Lewellen via talk [email protected]

| If you desire a visual idea then perhaps google jvc ha-s44x.

Thanks.

From past discussions, I know your shopping technique isn't like

mine.

But I'll mention my considerations on the off chance you might

find them

useful.

Most wired headphones are electrically / electronically

interchangeable. Of course that's a good thing. It also means

that > there

are a lot to choose from.

There are lots of issues of sound reproduction quality, but to be

honest, all should have sound quality that is good enough for a

reader

(as I understand it).

I would imagine that the main issues are comfort -- a very

individual

thing. Oh, and durability -- not something in the specs!

Here's what I glean from the specs of your old headphones:

-   closed (i.e. they try to block sound from your environment)
-   over-ear [I find such headphones uncomfortable fairly quickly]
-   5.57 ounces
-   button controls (what do they control?)
-   1.2 m cable [the units are unspecified but 1.2 ft would be

    very short]

Do you use the buttons? What for?

I think "over-ear" means that these clamp on your ear as opposed to

clamping on your head around the ear ("circumaural"). I find

over-ear

very uncomfortable after a few minutes but I seem to be in a

minority.

Do you really want to have sound isolation from the room

("closed")?

I imagine "situational awareness" would be useful.

Out of habit, I use ancient Sennheiser HD430 phones. They are

circumaural, light, open [i.e. I can hear things going on in the

room], good enough sound. They have replaceable cables and ear pads

(but now hard to find). Out of production since 1986. I find that

even these get uncomfortable after a while.

My current favourite is ear-buds. The ones with a selection of

soft

tips, not the hard ones. You can get decent inexpensive ones from

China.

I have, for example:

https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005002184896879.html

Currently C$16.84 without microphone. I paid less.

There are many other brands that are likely fine.

There is an enthusiastic following for "Chi-fi".

TWS (true wireless stereo) headphones are amazingly convenient

if you > have

Bluetooth. But you don't. There are a lot of adapters to convert

analog

to Bluetooth but I don't have any experience with them.



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