beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO 80 Ohm Over-Ear Studio Headphones in black. Enclosed design, wired for professional recording and monitoring
Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this Amazon listing.
Musical Instruments Studio Recording Equipment Headphone & In-Ear Audio Monitors Headphones
- Closed over-ear headphones, ideal for professional recording and monitoring
- Perfect for studio and stage recordings thanks to their pure, high-resolution sound
- The soft, circumaural and replaceable velour ear pads ensure high wearing comfort
- Hard-wearing, durable and robust workmanship Made in Germany. Innovative bass reflex system
- Practical single-sided cable (3.0m cable) . Comfortable fit due to rugged, adjustable, soft padded headband construction
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Beyerdynamic
Reddit Posts and Comments
0 posts • 32 mentions • top 28 shown below
21 points • Quagga_1
As a Beyerdynamic fanboi, how about the DT 770 Pro 80 ohm?
- Costs around $150 on Amazon (with over 6 thousand reviews with an average 4.5 stars)
- Easy to drive, so you won't need an amp
- V-shaped sound profile (emphasis on bass and treble, neutral mids) for fun and drama
- Excellent sound quality for music
- Excellent characteristics for gaming: -5dB isolation, wide soundstage, good imaging.
- Perhaps the most comfy headphones in the world?
- Also available in headset form
- Custom Game One Pro (with cable mic, $150)
- MMX 300 (with boom mic, $300)
Personally I combine mine with a AntLion ModMic Uni to great effect.
1 points • Flying_bousse
140$ on amazon shipped and with warranty
beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO 80 Ohm Over-Ear Studio Headphones in black. Enclosed design, wired for professional recording and monitoring https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016MNAAI/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_gBZ8EbVR03EPS
1 points • jnightx
maybe if you had mentioned your budget was $200 CANADIAN, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
1 points • fatmatt587
Any headphones that are halfway decent are wired. Look into any studio monitoring headphones. I love these: https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B0016MNAAI?psc=1&ref=ppx_pop_mob_b_asin_title
1 points • Androgymoose
Jesus. I’m real sorry about that! Good they lasted definitely. If you are searching for a good headset for price i totally recommend Beyerdynamics (the 80 ohm I got, Bass has more kick than 250). I picked up the grey ones because the satin-like material doesn’t make my ears sweat or hurt. I absolutely love them, excellent quality, and they are far more comfortable than Audio Technicas. I listen to records so I grabbed them and a small cheap portable amp ($25 or so) for that reason.
Do you live there as of late? I am curious how it is.
1 points • Hells-waiting
Why not just return it?
Also, the 80 ohm version is on sale for $159 on Amazon.
1 points • spoonfedsam
Check out the Beyerdynamic DT 770 (either the 32 or 80 ohm verisons). I recall that when I had these on and music playing I virtually could not hear anything, and they're super comfy, to boot.
1 points • Radioactive-A5q
Bro these: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016MNAAI?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Get the 35Ohm versions if you don’t have a solid sound card. By far the best headphones I’ve had. Previously used some Senneheisers, HyperX Alphas, Turtle Beach’s, and Logitech ones.
Best of luck man!
2 points • link_cleaner_bot
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2 points • the_real_lmn
I use the wired version of these ath-m50x's all the time, but I've also heard good things about the Beyerdynamic DT 770 Pro.
2 points • bobby3eb
If you can, get these: https://www.amazon.com/beyerdynamic-770-PRO-Studio-Headphone/dp/B0016MNAAI?th=1
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In whatever Ohm resistance suits you best. So damn good, comfortable. Really a standard now, you see them everywhere.
4 points • SirBuckeye
I just bought a new pair of cans after quite a bit of research reading reviews and threads over on r/headphones. Like, literally the UPS guy just dropped them off 10 minutes ago. I ended up buying the beyerdynamic DT770 Pro (80 ohm) and I'm listening to them for the first time while typing this. You need to decide what kind of things you want or like to get a better recommendation.
- Over-ear or Earbuds. Do you want cans or earbuds? This is just your preference for comfort and convenience. Earbuds have come a long way in recent years, but they still can't compare with most mid and high-end over-ear headphones.
- Open or Closed-back. Open-backed headphones allow sound in and out so you can hear people when they talk to you, but they can also hear your music very clearly which may disturb those nearby. Open-backed headphones usually have a wider soundstage and just sound "better" to most people, but if you listen in a noisy environment or a quiet environment with other people around, closed-back is a better choice.
- Amp or No Amp. Depending on your source and model of headphones, you may need or want a headphone amp to drive them. This is where the "Ohm" spec comes into play. If you listen on a phone or tablet, they don't have much power, so you need headphones with a low (<40) Ohm rating. If you listen on a PC then you can buy higher Ohm headphones or buy a small headphone amp to drive really high ones. The Ohm rating is the amount of resistance, so lower power devices just can't drive high Ohm headphones without an amp. Higher Ohm isn't necessarily better and even audiophiles argue about how much of a difference it makes. If your headphones lack the loudness or punchiness you expect, then a small amp can make a huge difference.
With your price range and assuming you want over-ear headphones and are listening on a PC, I recommend the DT770 Pros (80 ohm) if you want closed-back. If you want open-back I would go with the Massdrop Sennheiser HD6XX with a small amp.. If the extra amp is too much money, then go with the Sennheiser HD599.
If you can swing it, I highly recommend an amp for all of these phones though. They will sound better and just the convenience factor of having a dedicated volume knob for your headphones makes it worth it sometimes.
If you don't like any of my recommendations, head over to r/headphones and make a post in the pinned "Shopping and Help Desk" thread to get more input from other helpful users.
1 points • Moistdawg69
My gaming headset of few years has broke. I a semi audiophile and am looking for a good headset for music and gaming. If my audio drivers say this. Without getting a amp, what would be a good headset with aux jack. Would these work? They are 80 ohms. Is there anything better that will work with the built audio card. I am new to the whole concept of ohms. Thanks
1 points • WealthyandHealthy
So you think based on my needs that the Vic Firth pair is better than these?
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000AJIF4E/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_w0MYFb6D038DK?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016MNAAI/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_-0MYFbGGY5MTH?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
1 points • AnAnonymousFool
Im considering buying the Beyerdynamic DT 770 Pro 80 OHM version linked here
My motherboard is an Asus Tuf Gaming x570-plus and I was wondering if I will need an amp like this one if my main use will be for gaming
Also any microphone suggestions for good sound quality? or any alternative headphone suggestions?
My budget is around $250 for the entire setup, but if an amp is necessary, I'm willing to buy the amp if it goes over my budget
1 points • simencioo
Hello i'm new here. Is this a good combo?
Beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO 80 Ohm+ Fosi Audio DAC Q5
- Budget - about 200 euro
- Source - PC
- Will you be using these Headphones in Public? - No
- Preferred Music - I listen to all kinds of music. I love basses tho
- Uses - music, films and gaming ( I alredy have a mic)
1 points • Xx_Moody_xX
Here is the link to the amp I got:
https://www.amazon.com/Focusrite-Scarlett-Audio-Interface-Tools/dp/B07QR6Z1JB ref=mp_s_a_1_3?keywords=scarlett+solo&qid=1577846838&sprefix=scarlett&sr=8-3
Here the link to the headphones im talking about:
https://www.amazon.com/beyerdynamic-770-PRO-Studio-Headphone/dp/B0016MNAAI/ref=mp_s_a_1_1_sspa?keywords=dt%2B770%2Bpro&qid=1577846955&sprefix=dt%2B&sr=8-1-spons&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEzQ1JPVkVVVzJWQ09XJmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwMzE0OTkwMThYMU1YVzJYVjM4SSZlbmNyeXB0ZWRBZElkPUEwNzk2NTYxSkc0WjJVSVYzOTMyJndpZGdldE5hbWU9c3BfcGhvbmVfc2VhcmNoX2F0ZiZhY3Rpb249Y2xpY2tSZWRpcmVjdCZkb05vdExvZ0NsaWNrPXRydWU&th=1
2 points • acemonvw
I hear you in regards to using a VST - though I feel the iPad is slight better in that it's not using a mouse/keyboard.
I've waffled between the stereoping and the alpes machines one. I did look at the Alpes site and thought I could grab one for 279 Euros, but that was just a deal for black friday I guess. Oh well. Thing is, I guess it is no longer enclosed (not sure if the previous version from them was or was not though). Seems like a good price though, I mean, we're talking about half the price once you include being built. I think the guy from Alpes will build it for you as an extra fee. It looks like it's a total of 430 Euros. The Stereoping is $1000 USD. The Stereoping is fully enclosed, and I think probably looks just a little nicer. Hard to say what the other differences mean. The Alpes version does allow for 1000 extra patches, which seems like a nifty feature.
Hard not to stick with Patchbase though... I can use it with bluetooth midi.
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Oh... and yeah, the REV2 versus the Matrix 1000. It didn't even seem like a close call, the Matrix was much better to me. Filter FM on it sounded more interesting too, but maybe it was just the buzzing I heard everywhere on the REV2. Buzz buzz buzz everywhere. If you go to this video at 2:44 seconds (I tried to link it there), you can hear the oscillator bleed. I heard it really loudly on my headphones, but now I'm using my apple headphones and I can't really hear it. I know people have said it's not audible on speakers, and that's probably true, but I do a lot with my headphones (these) and it was loud and clear. Analysis on my DAW showed a signal:bleed ratio of 7:1, which was awful to me. I may have mentioned this earlier (I can't see my first message right now) but the Matrix did the same thing, only it was a signal:bleed ratio of 20:1, and was VERY difficult to hear.
When I was listening to that video I linked you to above, I recall thinking "oh, his sounds nice" but then I realized I had tabbed out and was listening to the peak, where I don't hear that bleedthrough. I'm not alone on this either - lots of people have noticed the oscillator bleed. See here and here. I'll never buy one of these synths again because of it. Maybe I'm super picky... but I know the matrix does this and my Polaris does this, but neither do it to the same extent. Both of those are manageable.
Sorry, that was long-winded. I will say I got some amazing patches out of the REV2 and honestly, the only reason I was able to sell it was that I was able to recreate my favorite patch on it using my Yamaha SY77 (of all synths).
1 points • f4lgrim
While I have not tried specifically the M60x's, I owned M40x's and used my brothers M50x's for a long time. the series in general is pretty good, but generally fairly flat sounding imo, meaning that bass doesnt pop that much but neither does treble. The closed back design I found had on both had accurate, yet narrow sound stage, like most other closed backs.
other options Id recommend:
closed back: DT770 80 Ohms, got a friend who swears by these. Little bit higher power needed but should be fine coming from a mobo.
Open back: I will swear by the HD58x's. I had Audio Technica Ad900x's, and their sound stage was flat, no forward or backward, and footsteps were incredibly hard to position. Bought the 58x's and holy shit are they accurate. Can be modded to have less bass for literally $0, and their imaging is phenomenal on their sound stage which feels quite a bit larger. The DT990's are also good. Same friend who swears by the 770's sold his and got 990's for gaming since the open back makes it way better.
1 points • dunkshaq
If those get delayed as well, I have two recommendations:
1: Brainwavz HM5 - These are an OEM headphone rebranded, the NVX XPT100 is pretty much the same thing. They are a little bit warmer of neutral, but I'd say that they're the more accurate closed back I've heard in the $200 or less range.
2: CAL! - If you don't need isolation and want a fun puncy bass leaning headphone, these are dope.
3: Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro - Super comfy, great isolation, and heaps of bass, but the treble can be too much for some people.
I'm a big fan of all of these headphones for what they accomplish at their price point.
2 points • thoailong87
You didn't specify whether you wanted open or closed headsets, so I will briefly highlight the differences just in case you aren't familiar.
Closed - sealed around your ears which will passively block out sound, just like your Powerbeats. This will give you the most sound isolation from sound leaking in and out of the headphones to your ear and surrounding environment. Sealed earcups also mean more sub-bass response, for better or worse depending on your preferences. Popular models in your price range include the
One of my originals. Enhanced treble and bass but not distastefully so
Enhanced mids and treble over bass, nice clarity
Open - the earcups have a grill on the outside which allow sound to easily leak into and out of your ears during playback. This affects the way sound bounces around in the earcup, and also allows sound from the right driver to bounce around and be heard better by the left ear, and vice versa. This often gives the impression of a wider and more open soundstage (the mental impression of instruments located around your head in 3D space). The drawback is that you can bother those around you and be bothered by noisy environments depending on your listening situation. If isolation isn't important, then consider these:
Has that mid/treble clarity that Audio-Technica is known for, loved the AD900X but can't find new
If it was my money, I'd go for the MSR7 for closed and the HD599/HD58X for open.
1 points • leonissans
alright, so I think what you might want is a pair of beyerdynamic dt 770 pros (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016MNAAI/ref=twister_B07H5HM6F6?_encoding=UTF8&th=1) and a monolith liquid spark (https://www.amazon.com/Monolith-Liquid-Spark-Headphone-Amplifier/dp/B07JW7NSXT)
3 points • HighQualityH2O_22
A few noteworthy items I found searching the 20% off pile:
Beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO 80 Ohm headphones (not Boompro compatable)
Renewed Audio Technica ATH-M40x headphones (not Boompro compatible unless modded).
Xbox One Wireless Controller - Night ops camo color Also available in red
1 points • Solbady
You're better off getting a pair of studio monitors and a desk microphone.
See: Beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO, and Blue Snowball/Blue Yeti
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016MNAAI/ref=cm_sw_r_fm_apa_i_NLhuEbBS805W3
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002OO333Q/ref=cm_sw_r_fm_apa_i_ZMhuEbWHGXBCJ
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002OO333Q/ref=cm_sw_r_fm_apa_i_ZMhuEbWHGXBCJ
Of you ABSOLUTELY NEED a "gaming" headset for any one reason, the only tolerable one I've used is the Sennheiser PC37X
https://drop.com/buy/massdrop-x-sennheiser-pc37x-gaming-headset
1 points • Greatest_Cupcake
I like Zeos. He's got a good angle on the common man. If I ever need anything more technical and facts based, I go straight for Amirm over at AudioScienceReview.com. You can't really get much better than his measurements.
Here's how it'd go down, right? 300 ish dollars for a DAC, Amp and headphones.
DAC: Topping D10 Just the best sub 100 dollar DAC. Seriously.
Amp: JDS Atom The O2 but smaller and cheaper. Maybe less powerful but not by much.
Cans: For Bass, the Philips SHP9500, for Analytical, the Audio Technica ATH-M40x, and for treble/ V shape, the Beyerdynamics DT 770s, 80 or 250Ohm.
You'll land anywhere between 230-300 dollars and this is a setup that can last someone a lifetime of gaming.
0 points • bobfig
beyerdynamic DT770 pro 80ohm is probably one of the best for sub $150.
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https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0016MNAAI
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ran mine going on 8 years and just added new cups to replace the failing/grimy old ones. totally worth just going to these plether cups.
https://www.amazon.com/BRAINWAVZ-Round-Replacement-Memory-Earpads/dp/B072PPPWBF