Submitted by Then-Effective5434 t3_ydamru in headphones
Not a native speaker, sorry for possible mistakes. I had this question for long time, previously I thought that of course Utopia is more technical than Elex, after all it driver have different material and so on so you definitely get better technicalities?
But than I read comment from one experienced guy here, that tonality is what really matters. Want more details? The more treble you have the more details you will hear. Also one time have read that Sennheiser HD800S have some special dip or what, somewhere in frequency response that can create this perception/feeling of the huge soundstage.
So looks like if you can eq something to Utopia FR graph you basically get Utopia? As I read again in comments somewhere, that usually impossible to recreate identical tuning, but I don't why and what science are behind it.
Before opening for myself this subreddit, I always believed in some 'technicalities', that usually audiophiles love to describe it as: punch, slam, soundstage, resolution, separation, imaging, speed, decay, much more other. So moving by price up to the TOTL headphones, you get not only good tuning, but also better details and other 'technicalities' because of driver implementation/material/design etc.
Now I'm confused, would two different headphones with identical FR graph sound the same? Can someone take Utopia pads and EQ Elex to the Utopia FR graph and call it a day?
For now I believe that some drivers can be more 'technical' than others, but maybe someday I would change my mind as that one redditor here
rhalf t1_itr5m38 wrote
What you call technicalities in engineering we call nonlinearities. Frequency response is also called a linear distortion. It's the kind of distortion that doesn't change with drive level (how much power you're putting in). Nonlinearities in are very important in any audio transducer. You want them as low as possible. That's because music is a continually changing drive level. Things get quieter and things get louder all the time. That's where the fun is The most important nonlinearities are the ones that happen to loudness of a particular tone, also known as amplitude modulation. Your hearing system is very sensitive to that. Amplitude modulation suffer the most from compression which is an inherent quality of any audio transducer. Basically as the diaphragm wobbles it has increasing tensions in it's suspension as well as decreasing motor strength, the further away the diaphragm is from it's resting position. This means that the stronger the wobbles, the less accurate it becomes and also the less sensitive it is. This is very bad for sound quality and it's a universal mark of driver's limitation to properly reproduce sound.
Compression can get suddenly tragically worse with phase issues. FamouS examples are Sennheiser hd820 and buchardt s400. Both have severe compression at resonances that cause phase cancellation and consequently notches in frequency response.
Last thing is the time delay spectrum. It's frequency response taken as a 'lump'. Basically one very smart guy discovered that our auditory system catches short sounds like transients as lumps of sound. You can't hear how long they last. Instead, your hearing tells you that a longer sound is higher in intensity than a short one. This lead to development of time delay spectrometry, today known for example as waterfall plots. They are particularly useful in medium and high frequencies, because they allow us to find ringing that doesn't show up in frequency measurements. It is a crucial driver behaviour and measurement for sound quality and spatial effects.