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Sennheiser improves on a reference headphones legend

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The new transducers in the HD 660 S open-back headphones are paired by hand, and are said to ensure low harmonic distortion and an authentic life-like sound
Sennheiser
The new transducers in the HD 660 S open-back headphones are paired by hand, and are said to ensure low harmonic distortion and an authentic life-like sound
Sennheiser
The HD 660 S headphones feature elliptical ear cups with replaceable ear cushions and thick padding on the headband for long-haul listening comfort
Sennheiser
Sennheiser has reduced the impedance of the HD 660 S headphones to 150 ohms, meaning they can be driven by mobile Hi-Res audio players 
Sennheiser
Sennheiser says its new HD 660 S headphones deliver an expressive, yet accurate and transparent, sound
Sennheiser
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For a number of years, Sennheiser's HD 650 headphones have been a mid-range audiophile favorite, and now the German audio brand has announced a successor. The similar-looking HD 660 S open-backs have lower impedance for drive compatibility with a number of Hi-Res digital audio players, improved the harmonic distortion and more connectivity options.

Open-back headphones generally offer a more spacious, and often much improved, sound than their more common closed-back cousins, but the design does mean that they don't block ambient noise and also leak music to those nearby, so are perhaps best suited for quiet room home listening. That said, Sennheiser has reduced the impedance of the HD 660 S headphones to 150 ohms (from 300 ohms), meaning they can be driven by mobile Hi-Res audio players from the likes of Pioneer and Fiio.

Mobile users rocking less capable music players or smartphones – and even some living room listeners – may need to pair the over-ear cans with a headphone amp/DAC like the MHA50 from McIntosh or Sennheiser's own HDV 820 model to drive them.

Sennheiser says its new HD 660 S headphones deliver an expressive, yet accurate and transparent, sound
Sennheiser

Sennheiser says that its new proprietary dynamic transducer design better controls the stainless steel fabric diaphragm, and when paired with high fidelity aluminum voice coils promises low harmonic distortion and lifelike audio that's described as expressive, yet accurate and transparent.

The new reference headphones have the same 10 Hz to 41 kHz frequency range as their predecessor, but offer 0.04 percent total harmonic distortion/noise and 104 dB SPL. They have similar elliptical ear cups with replaceable ear cushions and thick padding on the headband for long-haul listening comfort.

A detachable oxygen-free copper cable ending in a gold-plated 6.35 mm stereo jack is included in the box, plus another cord ending in a 4.4 mm Pentaconn stereo plug for balanced connection to DACs. There's a 6.35 mm to 3.5 mm adapter included in the box, too.

The HDD 660 S headphones carry a recommended retail price of US$499.95 and will be available later this month.

Product page: Sennheiser HD 660 S

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4 comments
EZ
Anybody ever heard of Grado headphones? These look suspiciously like a copy.
IvanWashington
why can't they design a high-fidelity headphone with high sensitivity so they can be driven by consumer-grade MP3 players and not just high-end stuff?
Wombat56
The "oxygen free copper" is a marketing scam. It doesn't hurt but has no practical advantage in this application and isn't worth spending extra money on.
And US$500 is "mid range"? Ouch!
JimFox
I have Grado SR60e on-ear phones; bottom of the range but good enough for my 70 y.o.ears to hear clear treble & mid-range plus tight, deep bass with no exaggerated boost [listening, Dr Dre?]. Have to connect thru a $9 CableCreation adaptor to USB, since my 3.5mm socket is busted on my MacBook Air; max volume is sometimes overpowering, so the 32 ohm impedance is no problem. All is VERY well!