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ap4ss3rby t1_j21io99 wrote

From what I have experienced, your headphones/earbuds might have a siginificant peak somewhere in their frequency response. Play a sine sweep and if one frequency becomes too loud try to remove it in EQ. My particular headphones have a vicious peak at around 9000Hz that makes them unusable for long periods without EQ, so I'd try that first

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nanomerce t1_j21l0zz wrote

it can be a lot of things, it can be ear fatigue yes, but it can also just be your getting more familiar and noticing flaws as you listen.

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ku1185 t1_j21lc27 wrote

Just thinking aloud: how does heat affect the drivers and coils? Doesn't heat affect conductivity of wires and malleability of drivers?

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floatingsphere t1_j221uyy wrote

Could be moisture build-up if they are IEMs. Your brain could also just be getting used to the sound

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Starfall119 t1_j22fqx9 wrote

Honestly dude you're going to get used to the better audio. It sucks and you'll always look back to that bliss but there ain't much you can do lol. Like people say, listen to the music, not the hardware or else you'll get pulled into the trap searching for the better stuff. Which depending who you are could be fine or not be fine

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ku1185 t1_j23dnnr wrote

He's also using them, pushing electricity through. From what I understand, voice coils will inevitably convert some of that energy to heat (not to mention mechanical energy), though correct me if I'm wrong.

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therealPaulPlay t1_j23fj19 wrote

It‘s like showering, you need to turn up the heat every once in a while to make it enjoyable😂 With headphones or earbuds, I recommend starting to listen at a lower volume because whenever you turn up the volume slightly, the sound quality appears to be „good“ again because you just get used to how your headphones sound. Just make sure to stop at some point, you don‘t want to ruin your ears… At least that’s how it is for me sometimes. Or just have a small break and let your ears readjust

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