This sounds straightforward - put on
headphones, play music - and that's all there is to it. Though, that
works, but with a decent set of headphones you can hear deep inside the music, if you
do it right.
To
make the most of the sound of your headphones let's start with the easy
stuff. Do you have the headphone's left channel on your left ear, and
the right one on your right ear? A good question to ask first. A lot of headphones do not make it so
easy to distinguish between left and right channels, they might use tiny
or nearly invisible "L" and "R" markings. Depending on the type of
music you play, reversing left and right channels might not make much of
a difference, but I always prefer to hear the stereo mix as the
engineers intended. Take a moment to figure out a way to clearly
identify the left and right channels on your headphone.
Then to the stereo: with headphones you're much more likely to hear
the finer details of the stereo mix than you ever will from a single
wireless or bluetooth speaker. Even with a pair of speakers, you only hear
proper stereo when you're equidistant from both speakers. With
headphones you're always in the sweet spot. In addition, with full-size on-ear or over-the-ear headphones experiment a bit
with the placement of the ear cups relative to your ears -- move the
cups a little higher or lower, and see how that changes the sound.
In-ear headphones
If
you're using in-ear headphones, but you don't have the optimum ear
canal seal for both ears, all bets are off. Some folks have an easy time
with this -- they pop in the ear pieces, wiggle them about a little bit,
and the seal is perfect. The headphones deliver satisfyingly deep bass
and block external noise, and you hear the headphones at their best.
Some people have to try on a bunch of differing tip sizes and types, and
never achieve the optimum seal, so the sound and isolation suffer.
Whatever it takes to improve the seal, including buying aftermarket tips,
will be worth it. One other thing to consider: your left and right ear
canals might be slightly different sizes and thus need different size
tips! If you're still having a tough time achieving a tight seal, try
this: as you slide the tip into your ear canal, open your mouth, and tug
a little on the top of your outer ear with your other hand. To do that,
reach your hand up and over the top of your head to do the tug maneuver
that will open your canals a little so it's easier to insert tips. Ear buds rest on the folds of the outer ear and don't require an air-tight seal, but ear buds never sound as good as headphones that fit inside ear canals.
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