Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Shure Se210 Sound Isolating Earphones- Black

Buy Cheap Shure Se210 Sound Isolating Earphones- Black


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The Shure SE210 are performance earphones featuring high definition micro-speaker technology. Developed to achieve excellent acoustic performance and innovative wearing flexibility, the SE2210s are top-notch phones.
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Technical Details

- Sound Isolating Design
- Speaker Type: Hi-Definition MicroSpeaker
- 2-Year Limited Warranty
- Included Deluxe Fit Kit
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Customer Buzz
 "Not worth the money" 2010-05-27
By S. Haskins
These earphones produce the most detailed sound of any I've used so far, there are too many bad points....



The main one is the lack of bass. If the iPod/Phone had the facility to adjust the base levels I would pass on this point, but they don't. The only one available is Bass Boost which the iPod can't handle and the sound becomes distorted. This is unacceptable for earphones of this price.



The memory foam earbuds are a very good idea, (you squish then up, pop them in your ear and wait for them to expand) but they wear out very quickly and are fiddly to put in as you have to hold them in your ear for about 10 seconds whilst pulling your ear lobe down until foam expands. Not very convenient if you're walking along the street and you fancy listening to some music.



The Silicon earbuds are similar to those found on most earphones, but they put too much pressure in my ears and I found them uncomfertable after a short time. They work their way out and I found myself constantly pushing them back in.



The cable goes around your ears and under your chin, however this causes problems with my glasses. when I try to wear them like conventional earphones, the weight of the cable pulls them out of my ears.



All in all, the detail these earphones can extract from the iPod is exceptional, but the lack of bass means they only get 3 stars.





Customer Buzz
 "Great sound but VERY bad reliability" 2010-05-23
By J. Dominguez
First pair broke within the first 6 months of purchase, left headphone stopped working.

Sent back to the address customer service provided and received a brand new set very quickly, so thumbs up for the customer service.



I am writing this review because my second pair has now broken a month after the warranty period, this time I can just hear constant static every time the cable is slightly moved.

The sound that these headphones produce and the customer service are great no doubt, but the reliability of this product is a real letdown.



Having used the product for 2 years I also notice that the cable is too heavy and the headphones constantly have to be repositioned in the ear or they drop out, and is very noisy as it bounces about when on the move ruining the sound quality.



If you are willing to spend this amount of money on a pair of headphones no doubt you want to get the right product...This is not it.



Customer Buzz
 "No Bass!!" 2010-04-27
By SonofSob (London)
These sound very clear indeed and you hear things in music that you hadn't noticed before.....but where is the bass?



Would recommend for classical, accoustic music etc but for modern rock, hip hop, pop avoid these and get some Klipsch X1 instead(on amazon today for £17.99), they have all the clarity of the Shures as well as perfectly balanced bass - best earphones I've ever owned.

Customer Buzz
 "Earphones (with amazing sound) for noisy places" 2010-03-23
By Senior Consultant (London)
Now, I've never liked in-ear earphones before trying these ones, mostly because they never stayed in place in my ears (I suppose my ears are a little smaller than average). But the Shure Se210's come with a good selection of sleeves, offering something for all ears; and one of the smaller ones fitted my ears perfectly. With that the earphones stay well in the ears and the blocking of outside noise is nothing sort of amazing. I can easily ignore people talking to me, which sometimes frustrates my colleagues.



Now even after getting these (I've had them for 6 months now), my favorite ones still are the Bang & Olufsen ones (which I've had for years). They have a hinge that goes behind the ear and leaves then the speaker right in front of your ear. So the design isn't as intrusive as the Shure's. But because of the design, in a noisy place you have to turn the volume really high to hear them properly. This obviously is annoying for two reasons. First, I don't want to listen to my music too loud. And second, I absolutely hate those people who have their music so loud you can hear them half a carriage away in tube.



So I needed something that would work in noisy places such as the tube or the street. The noise canceling headphones (as brilliant they are) are still too cumbersome (and a bit too expensive for the purpose). So it had to be noise blocking. Now, I had a pair of decent Creative noise blocking headphones, but I never liked the sound of them (it was as if the sound was coming from under ground), and I was a bit afraid that it would always be a problem with noise blocking headphones. But after trying out the Shure ones, I found this to be not so.



The sound (despite the speaker being in your ear) is clear and very balanced. These are no bass boost earphones. If all you want to hear is bass, then these are not the headphones for you - stop reading. Now I mostly listen to heavy metal, classical with some pop/rock thrown into the mix and these earphones work perfectly. As many other reviews I read also highlighted, the focus seems to be more on the high and mid ranges, with the bass not dominating, but being in balance with the highs and mids. Though I now often have to set the volume on my mp3 player to absolute minimum so that it's not too high in some situations (for me that is, others have no chance of hearing anything from your earphones).



Now that being said, I do still prefer my B&O headphones, because they don't stress my ears as much as the Shures ones do (you can still keep the Shrue's in your ears for 6hours and be fine). But the not in-ear design leaves you feeling more free and I think the sound is marginally better (well they are marginally more expensive). But if there is noise in the background I always switch to my Shures, which actually is quite often. So yes, I do like these, a lot.

Customer Buzz
 "Sounds great, a bit difficult to get used to" 2010-02-20
By Christian Hammer Nielsen (Denmark)
I guess it's just me but I was worried at first that the discomfort of wearing the SE210 - even with the smallest foam pads - wouldn't subside. I gave them a week but after a day or three the discomfort had subsided and the sound isolation is still great. I guess I must have a small meatus acusticus externus.



The sound quality - paired with my Cowon S9 - is fabulous. Granted, these are my first non-standard earbuds but I'm amazed at how I can distinguish the different instruments far better than on anything else I've listened to. For example: A bass thump is no longer just a deep thud but a bass-string and a bass-drum being struck at the same time. Yummy.



Don't listen to the people complaining that the bass in these earphones are inadequate: My guess is that they have either failed to place them _inside_ their ears correctly or they haven't bothered to adjust the equalizer for their speakers (earphones). On my Cowon S9 I use the BBE Earphone setting and it sounds great. And I haven't even bothered to try out any of the many other EQ options on my Cowon S9.


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