kinda interested in the sibera V2 from steel series, pretty popular, been around for awhile and is one of those tried and true kind of products...
i probably have a 1% chance of ever winning in duel against you
as far as headphones not having a mic...zalman makes an awesome mic for like ~10 bucks..clips onto headphone wire..ect
VaeVictis:i find it funny that you even consider grammar a sign of intelligence, that itself is a very uneducated claim
In my opinion... Fucking retarded, plain and simple. Headphones do not and should not require their own amplifier. Most media you'll ever listen to these days will be digital, and the preamplifier section of the stereo system itself should be the only place where valve amplification methods would be wanted or needed, maybe also the power amp section by way of rectifier valve. If I understand the function of rectifiers correctly, they convert rather unpredictable AC currents to DC as well as multiply the voltage, allowing you to drive larger speaker sets. The problem is... that creates a lot of heat which eventually causes the valve to fail under normal operating conditions. Like I said, most media these days is digital. 99% of all stereos sold these days are 100% solid state, meaning they don't feature valves or other diode formats as a means of amplifying the output signal. This is probably because diodes are notorious for failure. Bottom line, 100% solid state products WILL last longer. However, valve amplification techniques do tend to produce a different sound that most refer to as "warm" sounding, so some people still prefer those types of stereo systems.The stereo itself should be where changes to the tone of the signal should be made. Taking a solid state digital stereo system (which is ALREADY using it's own built-in amplifier) playing a digitally mastered audio CD, listening to it through a pair of headphones,... and then sticking a tube format amplifier between the two!?! That's just ridiculous. The proper thing would be to purchase a REAL tube stereo amplifier with an onboard 7-band, 10-band, or WHATEVER-band EQ section. There is NEVER a need to stick ANYTHING between the stereo and the headphones.To put it in guitarist terms... this is like putting your distortion pedal in the effects chain AFTER the wah-wah pedal. Sure, you can do it, but it's gonna sound like shit and that's why nobody ever does it.This little invention is meant to be marketed for the people who have more money and vanity than good sense.
Quote from: adz1La on June 07, 2013, 09:00:43 PMas far as headphones not having a mic...zalman makes an awesome mic for like ~10 bucks..clips onto headphone wire..ectDunno if that would really be ideal. It would probably work for most gaming applications, but you might also pick up more background noise since the mic wouldn't be situated directly in front of your mouth.