Shure SE846 - The Cost of Three Dragons

UPDATE: I have published a full review of the Shure SE846 at Headfonia.

Matt Engstrom finished a wee interview by backing Daenerys Targaryen. You don't have to press me hard to force an 'amen'. The others are just squabbling pretenders, armed with "should be's" and high hopes. Targaryens have got dragons. You can take that to the bank.

And while I durst not call Shure's competitors 'pretenders', it's meet to give credit where credit is due. Love them or hate them Shure have debuted firsts upon firsts in the earphone industry and their designs have pushed boundary after boundary. Sometimes, that boundary clinks like micro injected metal. Sometimes, it clinks like coin. 

I hear both in the SE846.

The Dragons
ake no mistake, this earphone isn't another 'not custom' universal earphone. It was designed from the ground up for exact replication. It's got parts that resemble engine blocks and complex bongs. When all is said and done, it packs an engineering orgasm of never-been-done-befores. At least another ounce of improvements are ticker-taped over the sheets.

The much-touted low-pass filter comprises ten layers of metal and spacer. The drivers are specifically tuned from the ground-up for the SE846. You won't find them anywhere else. The exchangeable filter system, too, is about as proprietary as it gets. 

Shure made absolutely certain that this earphone would make an impact. It's not even out yet and it has. The ~1.000$ USD price is equally dragon as its technological advancements. Shure's newest products have always commanded top dollars. Their E500 was the first commercially available three-driver two-way universal earphone. The 'E' could have stood in for $. In 2006,  500$ USD for a pair of universal earphones was unheard of. In 2013, universals from manufacturers all over the globe command prices of up to 3.000$. 

Unlike boutique designers such as Final Audio, Shure price things based on the technology crammed inside their products, the cost of production, and of course, the ostensible market. Let's call it fair.

Though, it may not seem like it.

s I mentioned above, the tech inside is brand new, proprietary stuff that is probably years ahead of the game. If it's worth it to you isn't really important. It's worth it to the industry. Earphones aren't a stagnant commodity. They evolve to fit different moulds. Currently, the emphasis on high-end portable audio is an an all-time high whose summit we won't see for a long time.

The problem Shure's latest faces is simple: hitherto >1.000$ USD universal earphones re either boutique luxuries, or they are custom spin offs. The former is unique in that performance isn't that important in the overall picture. The latter is unique in that it siphons popularity from already well-known custom models. Shure enter this market with a decidedly different product.

I think it will work out for them.

Sound
he sound of the SE846 is decidedly Shure. ow-end aside, mids are well-emphasised and detailed. The top end is smooth. Cymbal decay is fast, sibilance is for naught. Soundstage and stereo imaging have taken on a new facet since last time: width. There's bite in the guitars irrespective of the tube you choose. Exercising the regions of 1-8kHz is apter than you think.

The human voice tops out at around 4.000Hz. Theoretically to get a good reproduction of it, 8.000Hz is what you need. uitars, drums, and most of the middle stuff you need to put together a good band is contained within those bounds. Sure, frequencies trip up beyond that. But the good stuff: your vocals and violins, cymbals largely stay within those bounds. Emphasising clarity and space within that range is something that isn't too hard to do with the SE846 kit. 

But Shure stick to their guns. Their high-end earphones have never been sibilant, nor etchy. The SE486 is never etchy. You won't get painful shivers in your ears no matter what filter you screw in. Trebleheads, the SE846 may not be for you. And that's okay. You've never been a Shure fan anyway. 

Interestingly, the SE846 sounds great with trance - and that despite kicking low-end arse. It's because of clarity. Honestly, this earphone's bass is something you won't forget. Ever. It's not the bass of a balanced armature earphone. It's got more low end kick than your JH16Pro - but here's the interesting bit: that bass is completely its own. We've all praised earphones that put out prodigious lows without muddling the mids and highs. But today, we'll have to re-analyse exactly what that means. here's nothing out there that really does what the SE846 does for the low end as an integral part musical gestalt. 

Throneward
ig the entire package or pan it. It's your choice. But denying what Shure are capable of is ridiculous. Personally, borderline etchy treble is my game. And I could do with a big more edge in vocals. The SE846 may not be for me. Detailed, powerful bass - if kept in its place - is something I've craved, but - in light of demoing the SE846 - realised that my heretofore favourites do lack in key areas. Personal listening habits aside, I'm keen on this earphone.

The coming weeks and months will tell whether or not Shure's new masterpiece of micro injected metal will keep the throne. For now, it marches with the assurance of cutting edge technology and a proven track record of innovation. Of course, Shure's new designs are extremely robust - no more cracked backs or 145$ cable replacement operations. 

Dragons are key to the throne. Awe ensures its legacy. Be certain, Shure are praying for the later.

NOTE: Below, you will find pictures of Shure's recent press event in Tokyo. Mr. Engstrom and Mr. Sullivan performed their spiel in front of Japan's biggest wigs and nerdiest ears. It was a great time. Just check out Shure Japan's SE846 poster - what incredible product photography. 

The close ups were taken a day later at Shure's HQ. Unfortunately, I left the macro setup at home. Expect better pictures from fans in the coming days.

It's headphone month in Japan - Fujiya Avic and e-Earphone

Last February's cold was broken by an intimate gathering of the maddest audiophiles around Japan. It's now May and temperatures tip above 20 degrees on any given day. Three months is a long time to go without a show - especially for us nerds. 

Famous Fujiya
Saturday 11 May, Fujiya Avic kicks off their Spring Headphone show in Tokyo. Most of Japan's big makers will be there as well as the upstarts and outgrowths of former biggies. Ω image is looking forward to meeting the local crazies as well as Headfi's most febrile lot: the Tokyo group. Expect pictures and endless, lusty slobber from the lot.

Follow #hpfes for more information.

UPDATE: Ω's impressions of #HPFES2013 can be found here

Location info:
 開催日 : 2013年5月11日 (土曜日)
  開催時間 : 10:30 開場 - 18:30 終了
    会場 : スタジアムプレイス(青山東京メトロ銀座線 「外苑前」駅3番出口 徒歩2分)

COMMING SOON - ポタフェス
Not to be outdone, e-earphone will host a two-day show in Osaka on the 25-26 weekend. 2013 looks to be the year of e-earphone. Every time I set foot in that shop, I get giggly pimples of excitement. Naturally, Ω will make it to their show. The Tokyo group? I have no idea, but I hope I'll see at least one. 

UPDATE: Ω's impressions of ポタフェス Day 1 can be found here and Day two can be found right here.

Location info: 
 〒542-0076 大阪府大阪市中央区難波4丁目2−1
 難波御堂筋ビルディング
0120-010443
namba2.com‎ 
 
Japan is full of trade shows and large, nerdy gatherings. If you're in the area, stop by, say hi; we can toast amps/DACs and squeal with delight like the girl scouts we really are. 

Forza Audio Works - cables good enough to munch

Forza Audio Works cables have made the rounds in TouchMyApps headphone reviews. Finally. 

In case you don't know, Forza is a cable and interconnect company run by Matthew, one of the kindest gentlemen in aftermarket audio. If TouchMyApps didn't convince you of the fact, let me reiterate: Matthew is a gentleman of the highest order. His cables are works of art. If you have an interconnect need, he can meet it.

Forza also do iPod modifications. Ω will be purchasing one in the coming months to keep abreast of the mod world (and because our beloved iPod shuffle 512MB from 2005 has finally bit it and we (I'm being cheeky here by saying 'we' as it is just me) want an upgrade).

But enough about us, the whole tamale is here. ​

Antelope Audio Zodiac Silver debut

Ω image is taking a good look at Antelope Audio's Zodiak Silver DAC/headphone amp/pre amp. Silver is the entry Zodiak model but still supports a host of great input and outputs.

音茶楽 Flat4-玄 - Ocharaku Flat4-Kuro

Ocharaku's excellent Flat4 series is about to get another entrant. Kuro is the latest Twin Equalised Element. Like Sui, it will also utilise aluminium in its central cabinet. The best news is that it comes at a much lower, audio folk-friendly price. 

It will be released in June and demo'd at Fujiya's upcoming headphone festival on May 11. 

For more information as it becomes available, please visit Ocharaku's earphone home page.

Press materials below:

(NOTE: Press release is in PNG format. Links can neither be copied nor clicked. Sorry for the inconvenience.)

UPDATE: Flat-4 KURO has just got some ohmage

 

PR-Ocharaku-Flat4-Kuro-01.png

a-morning-at-fitears-factory

How is a company that holes up in a Ginza spire supposed to leg its way up a ladder dominated by industry heavies like Ultimate EarsJerry HarveyWestoneSennsaphonics, and ACS

Titanium. 

Yup.

But I'll get to that after I finish tooting my own horn.

I had barely toed my way across the threshold of FitEar's Chiba factory when Mr. Keita Suyama - easily FitEar's best-known face - shot a polite duck my way. "You are the first journalist to come here." 

Dear me. He called me a journalist. I ducked back politely, then basked for a few seconds in some sort of self-satisifed chemical pick-me-up. Weee! Looking back, I should have realised who I was talking with. Mr. Suyama is perhaps the politest chap I've met. Ever. He buys - not serves - tea for guests, treats them to sweet-spot chairs in his listening room, smiles eye-to-eye through entire conversations, and introduces as many as he can to one of life's guiltiest pleasures: anime songs. Listening to Mami Kawada through a pair of ToGo! 334 while sipping hot vending-machine green tea is something every geek should attain to. 

I’m a sucker for politeness. I almost believed that Mr. Suyama actually considered me a journalist. I still savour that moment. Whatever I am, evidently I am the first of my kind to enter FitEar’s Chiba factory. Practically the entire FitEar family showed up to show me around. FitEar is one part of a greater Suyama dynasty. It was birthed from the Suyama hearing protection business, which is fathered by Mr. Suyama’s father, Mr. Suyama. The Suyama kids run sundry areas of the business. 

If you’re in the market for a hearing aid, you can get impressions done at the Ginza spire. Your impressions are then sent to Chiba where long-lasting moulds are created. There’s a bit of acrylic to be ground before experienced technicians place tiny balanced armature speakers inside. Voila!

Of course, ohm-image readers are probably more interested in FitEar’s line of universal and custom earphones. And you’d be daft not to be. Be it build or sound, FitEar’s customs have always pushed the envelope. They were the first acrylic custom earphone maker to fill their shells with resin, the first to fit police-sanctioned coaxial connections to their housings, and the first to shunt titanium into earphone sound tubes. 

They’d be daft not to.

Titanium has as many benefits as a metal can: it resists corrosion, it is chemically inactive, it is low maintenance, and it doesn’t rust. The problem is that it is expensive and harder to work with than most metals. Much harder. It requires more skill than a mage can shake a stick at. Fortunately, FitEar attract mages. 

Mr. Suyama showed me around his shop. There was drilling, moulding, shaving, smoothing, and a pretty girl by the name of--- The intensity of concentration in his shop buzzed. No one danced or sang. Their level of focus makes the shochu I’m drinking now blush.

After going through individual introductions and bowing half a dozen times, I turned to face a wall of work: dozens of earphones, hearing aids, and customs housed in thick plastic work boxes. Each sported a name, a date, a model number, and probably some secret code that only FitEar know. Mr. Suyama grabbed one at random. “We have so many orders now,” he said. “Sometimes we get a little behind.” 

I recognised the name on the box: Baptiste Sevin. He’s a mate of mine from Headfi, a gentleman, and a seafood scholar. Before moving back to France, Sebastian accompanied me to the Spire to get impressions done and to enjoy the sweet spot. We spent about five hours with Mr. and Mrs. Suyama, talking shop, talking music, talking anime, and talking way deep koto stuff that I generally lied about. I mean, who knows koto? Sebastian does. While my cultural spots may have shone through, Mr. Suyama’s didn’t. 

He kept up with Sebastian, proudly displaying his wares (including a couple unreleased earphones that have me counting my beans). Sebastian went to work deciding which earphone he would go for. He chose the MH335DW, an earphone that reminds me of the Private 333, but with a tinge more midrange sweetness and a lot more price. 

I imagine that by now, Sebastian has the earphones in his ear and is trying to tune out his wife’s protests. At the very least, his 335’s are going through final testing at FitEar. I expect to see him on Headfi's 335DW thread soon.

No company operates flawlessly. There are cracks here, missing drivers there, a lack of holiday leave there. FitEar are a Japanese company. They do things as much as possible by the clock. But, they are also Japanese. They try, as much as is possible with the current technology, to perfect a product before sending it out. And, they are honest about what they can and what can’t do.

Artwork is still something they can’t do. But, not one of the hundreds of artists and engineers that sport FitEar customs seems to mind. Surprisingly, very few audiophiles do. Mass production is another. FitEar may have thirty full-time employees. The number may be fewer than that. What they do with that number is amazing.

Like titanium.

FitEar insist on squeezing titanium shunts into their universal and custom lines. For all its non-gummy plusses, titanium also has an audio plus: it’s inert. It will keep its shape no matter the sound wave passing through it, making sure that the sound jumping from the drivers is as pristine as possible. 

In the back of FitEar’s shop is a case of teethy-looking things. Had I been more attentive in the 1990’s to blockbuster films, I’d have wet myself as I recognised the telltale filaments, the metallic tendons. The teethy things are a portent of things to come: The Terminator. Polished Titanium mesh, gleaming cold in the early March Chiba air. Two rows of four, queued up with robotic precision. Mr. Suyama assured me they were just dentures. Sure, I nodded. 

In the 1990’s I was a wannabe skateboarder with no time for movies. Still, the dentures mesmerised me. I didn’t think to ask who they belonged to, or if I could touch them. Instead, I went to work shooting. 

It must have been cute to have a foreign ‘journalist’ leaning over a box of dentures because my next stop was a step behind me: a workbench crowned by a tabletop softbox and a handful of titanium bolts. “These are what we make the dentures out of - and our earphones.” And that was how Mr. Suyama nudged earphones back into the morning. I resumed shooting, a little less mesmerised, before being lead downstairs for another round of tea. 

We sat down in a well-lit conference room kitty-corner to Mr. Suyama’s father’s office. (Remember, it is a family business.) Another large box lay semi-open before me. The FitEar staff around me grinned in their lab coats before opening it all the way. Inside were three grey motorcycles and a miniature giant robot. Cool. I’m not into motorcycles. I think the world could do with more robots though.

“These are titanium models,” said Mr. Suyama matter-of-factly. Whoa. “We cast them from plastic models and built them in titanium.” Holy... 

It was strange to handle the otherwise impervious metal so gingerly. “They aren’t for sale. We made them for fun - to see if we could do it.” 

“You sure did,” I said. “You sure did.”

All five fingers of the robot’s hand moved independently. Individual joints curl around model guns, pens, spoons, chopsticks. Legs, arms, neck, torso - each works independently. Titanium is weightier than plastic. I didn’t ask if it was a Gundam or not. Having failed one cultural test already, I should have. Whatever it was, I could imagine it lumbering around Tokyo, dragging its tonnage to the nearest flatbed lorry and asking for a lift to Odaiba. The motorcycles were no less impressive. One had plastic bodywork. Each sported rubber tyres. But everything else, including the kickstands, were titanium. Everything plastic models can do, FitEar’s special one-off titanium models can - and double as bricks to send through windows in the case of a fire. 

I did quick maths in my head: “I guess these would go for tens of thousands of dollars.”

“Not for sale.”

“Hmmm.”

I finished my tea and said my goodbyes. Mr. Suyama drove me to the nearest station, where I lumbered to the washroom as quickly as my heavy work bag and bladder would allow. It was a lot of tea. 

On the way up the stairs to my train, I tucked my ToGo! 334 into my ears and enjoyed Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures. By the time I arrived back in my office, I was on to New Order. Mr. Suyama had heard of neither. He’s a jazz and anime man. And, while his competitors dabble in plastics and carbon fibre, he whittles away with a much more difficult substance: titanium. I think he has no delusions of attaining best sales among custom earphone manufacturers. He probably has the most skilled team of technicians under him, not to mention the technical drive and history necessary to perfect a niche that is fastly being overrun by startups.

FitEar
 T: +81 03-3549-0755

 〒104-0061 東京都中央区銀座6-16-12須山歯研銀座ビル
104-0061 Tokyo To, Chuo Ku, Ginza 6-16-12 Suyama Dental Laboratory Ginza Building, Japan

Camera in use: X-Pro 1 with ZM Zeiss 35/2,0 Biogon

 

Fujiya Avic's 2013 ポータ研 - coolest portable audio out of Japan

You can count on two things in Tokyo: earthquakes and audio festivals. The latter is made possible by rabid fans and manufacturers who just love to connect. The former sometimes makes it hard to get to the latter.

Last week's 2013 Winter ポータ研 went unhindered by quakes, tsunami, and other disasters. And the show? It was anything but disastrous. Billed as a smaller option to historic meets in May and October, the February meet blasted through all my expectations.

Sun Plaza's 14th floor was packed by hundreds of sweaty audio fans. I joined the fray, milling around some of the coolest gadgets I've seen in a while. Usually, manufacturers wait until May or October to release the cool stuff, but this time, they pulled out all stops. As a Japanese event, kitsch was there in full force, too. Kitsch in the lights, in the booth layout, in the wardrobe of the fanatics. But hey, what is Japan without overwhelming kitsch? 

Fujiya-2013-02-kitsch.jpg

Below are the items that caught my eye.

hippo ProOne earphones

Historically, hippo audio have had a few problems with follow through. By consequence, their products appeared cheap in comparison to others in a similar price bracket. Those days are behind us. Their new earphone is a fine machine. Its low profile allows it to disappear in the ear, making possible side-sleeping, desk-kipping, and the like. But it doesn't give up sturdy fit and build. The earphone is solid and gives up a forward, softly aggressive sound that does rock proud. The cable could use a little work but it seems to fit the bill of purchase. Expected release early in spring.

Fujiya-2013-02-hippo-proone-2.jpg
Fujiya-2013-02-hippo proone.jpg
Musix Cables Wagnus

Wagnus cables are for the fashion-conscious portable audiophile. Garnished with glittering plastic gems and sporting twinkling cable sleeves, they truly are eye catching. And, it seems their CEO, mastering engineer Haruyuki Kume, has a thing for Russian legends. 

Fujiya-2013-02-Wagnus.jpg
Centrance HiFi M8

I've been told that its debut is only a little ways off. From what I saw Saturday, it is ready. The HiFi M8 comes in several flavours, each of which is a delectable delight. No surprises from Centrance: the M8's noise floor is low and there is power to boot. 

Fujiya-2013-02-Centrance-M8.jpg

Fostex TH600

I had a hard time deciding where to put the Fostex TH600 in the line up. It is a fantastic headphone, clear, even-timbred, and mid-grounded. It's been a long time since the live music aficionado in me has been intrigued by a closed headphone. It comes at a more agreeable price, too, and for the chronic collector, its black matte surface will provoke less spousal interest and ire.

Ω image has since reviewed this wonderful headphone.

Fujiya-2013-02-TH600.jpg

3D printed headphone kits
By far the most interesting gear to me were the new 3D headphone kits. Kits are purchased at 5.000¥ for starters, and go up to 12.000¥ with drivers included. The audio engine is driven by SONY's well-respected CD900ST studio headphone speakers. 

My interest in 3D printing began with Jerry Harvey's custom earphones and was incremented as I first read Cory Doctorow's Printcrime. The fact that today, you can hold in your hand a headphone that began its life in someone's printer stresses the bounds to which democracy stretches. And yes, you get to build them yourself. Damn straight.

There were many other interesting products but these were were the most interesting to yours truly.

Fujiya-2013-02-kit HP.jpg
Fujiya-2013-02-KIT HP wearing.jpg