Still, the bass doesn’t really overwhelm the mids here and it’s a good overall presentation – again, for the price. You really need to crank the volume here to hear the mids well – that’s thanks to the massive mids dip on the tuning. Up next is Demon Hunter’s “I Am A Stone,” which I use to test whether the bass is too strong and overwhelms the mids as that is just as important as how strong/good the bass is. It’s slightly above average, so it earns a 6/10 here – great quantity, ok quality. These have some really solid bass for the price, but it’s not at the quality level I expect from a more expensive IEM. ![]() The sub-bass has some really good body to it, though it’s pretty fuzzy. I’m starting off with the Mid-bass/Sub-bass test I’m using David Guetta’s “I’m Good (Blue).” There’s some really ghood impact here, but it does feel pretty thin compared to some, admittedly, much more expensive IEMs. ![]() I’m using Tidal Hi-Fi Plus to power it with MQA on. That’s really good for a 3.5mm unbalanced connection – bravo Earsonics. ![]() I’m driving these off of my new Cayin N8ii DAP on solid-state with medium gain at around ~35/100 volume. I included the Andromeda 2019 I just got as well since it's probably the close I have here price-wise, though they graph like polar opposites. The highs are nice and tapered off, which might help or hinder the Onyx on the songs below. So, the Onyx has some solid bass and sub-bass, but not mind-blowing, and somewhat recessed mids according to the FRG. The closest thing I have is the Kiwi Ears Orchestra Lite and while it’s not too far off, it’s still pretty different – not to mention the price difference. I don’t much that is in the $6-700 range. 9/10 points here.Ĭheck out the below to see how these compare to…well…nothing really. The weight can get uncomfortable after long listening sessions, so it’s something to consider. The all-metal design makes them pretty heavy and they are pretty thick and somewhat large – not Ronin large, but still bigger than almost anything from Campfire Audio for example. The comfort is good, and these are designed really well, but they’re not the smallest or lightest IEMs ever. The black Anno on these feels durable and my used copy came with no scratches or blemishes, which is how IEMs should look, but my Mentor somehow managed to pick up a scratch on the “gold” trim despite how careful I was with them, so this is really nice to see. The design looks really great here as well – someone went to design school. This is an all-metal IEM and makes stuff like the $5k Jewel or the $6.6k Traillii look like a cheap toy. Moral of the story: a majority of Baby Boomers are computer illiterate.Holy crap, they built these like a friggin’ tank. So I went ahead and deleted everything except the "User" files which contain all documents, downloads, pictures and all that, and that was around 17GB, stuck that on a flash drive, and presto chango, there's 40GB now free on her computer. Is it starting to make sense why she filled 120GB? She essentially had two whole operating systems on one computer. Not just her personal files, but the system files of the old computer, the applications, the cache. I decide to open it up, and it's literally all of my mom's old computer. So I went and checked "Get Info" and it's 43 GIGABYTES. Well, lo and behold, this singular file that the data recovery place gave to her was on her desktop. They then gave her a file with everything that they were able to recover. UPDATE: I looked over her computer and it's important to note that her old computer's (also a Mac) hard drive broke in 2015, and she took the hard drive to one of those data recovery places.
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