Se connecter
Se connecter

ou
Créer un compte

ou
FR
EN

Argus du Audio-Technica ATH-M20

Avertissement

Attention, cote argus calculée sur un petit nombre d'annonces

Les prix indiqués dans les petites annonces des particuliers sur Audiofanzine ne sont pas nécessairement les véritables prix de vente ou d'achat.
Les annonces avec options, ou constituant un pack, ne sont pas prises en compte.
Où acheter ATH-M20 ?
Moins
Aucun revendeur ne propose ce produit pour le moment.
Alerte disponibilité
Alerte nouvelle annonce
Argus 34,50 €
Voir tous les avis
Anonyme
Note : 10 sur 10

« Quality at an affordable price, with some compromises. »

Publié le 30/06/11 à 05:20
contenu en anglais (contenu en anglais)
The Audio-Technica ATH-M20's are unbelievable. I say that not because they themselves are incredible headphones; in fact, I find them unbearably (for me) flawed.

When I went to my friend's to try them on for the very first time, one quality absolutely dominated my attention: They were tight. Very tight. Unbearably tight for my purposes. Granted, this accomplishes a couple of things. They help prevent a lot of sound leakage, and they stop them from falling off. These are two nice qualities that I would prefer to be accomplished by better design, rather than brute tightness, but for $20, it's a quality that other headphones can't really touch. Unfortunately, the headphones still leak quite a bit, especially when the volume is turned up past a low-medium level.

As I review these, I have to keep in mind to mention the mundane things that I, an owner of higher-end headphones, have begun to take for granted. The first is the coiled cord. This is a hugely wonderful thing, as it makes the cord only about as long as they need to be. The tension in this cord is a little much when using it to listen to an iPod or a lighter device, as it pulls the device along. With heavier studio equipment however, this becomes a non-issue. Of course, most people who would use these pair of headphones all the time likely don't own a bunch of heavy equipment, so it would have been nice to see a looser cord.

The outputting to a 1/8" with a 1/4" adapter is nice, as it facilitates consumers not having to deal with the hassle of an adapter if they choose to use it for more consumer-oriented things like computers and mp3 players.

As for studio use, its tightness is wonderful; if wearing while recording, there's just about no fear of them falling off. I would never use them to mix however. Even if you get over the disadvantages of not having monitors, the Audio-Technica ATH-M20s are not at all suited to it; the higher-tier models will be better all-around for that.

However, since this sits right in a consumer price point, the Audio-Technica ATH-M20s are FANTASTIC value, and if you were doing a lot of this, I would not hesitate to grab a pair of these at all. If you were in a studio, I'd say shell out a bit more for the next tier up, the ATH-M30's. If you had money to spend, the ATH-M50's are unfairly good. But that's a whole different ballpark. The ATH-M20's are a great pair of headphones.