
BEST FOR: ambience enthusiasts with hair
WORST FOR: bald bass freaks
Audio-Technica ATH-AD900
($299, audio-technica.com)
Beyerdynamic DT-990
($345, beyerdynamic.com)
Grado RS2i
($495, gradolabs.com)
HiFiMan HE-300
($249, hifiman.com)
Sennheiser HD598
($249, sennheiserusa.com)
Sony MDR-Z1000
($499, sony.com)
YOU’LL NEVER BE TEMPTED to take this headphone on the bus. The earpieces of Audio-Technica’s ATH-AD900 are huge, measuring about 4.5 inches in diameter and concealing a big 53mm driver. Unlike almost all other headphones, the ATH-AD900 does not have an adjustable band. Instead, it features a pair of spring-loaded, padded “wings” that support it on your head. The soft padding and big earcups made the ATH-AD900 super-comfortable for Howard, Joe, and me. But it felt droopy to Will, and Geoff found the feel of the wings on his bald pate intolerable after a few minutes.
The two oldest panelists — Howard and I — especially loved the sound of the ATH-AD900, and the younger panelists liked it pretty well, too. Howard picked it as his favorite. “It has a virtually perfect balance, very clean and open-sounding,” he raved. Will ranked it last, but still enjoyed the sound. During the couple of weeks I spent putting this article together, I found myself grabbing the ATH-AD900 most often when I wanted to listen for fun — partly for the comfort but mostly for the performance.
Everyone felt the ATH-AD900 had a spacious, involving ambience, but most of the panelists also felt its bass was a little weak. This isn’t a great headphone for rock music; when I played Mötley Crüe’s “Kickstart My Heart,” Tommy Lee’s powerful kick drum practically vanished from the mix. Some complained that the treble sounded a bit overemphasized, which occasionally made voices sound harsh.
The frequency response of the ATH-AD900 confirms our listeners’ impressions that its tonal balance is light on the bass and perhaps a tad trebly. Driving it from a 75-ohm output impedance produced only a slight change in frequency response, a bump of about 1 dB centered around 100 Hz. Impedance averages about 35 ohms at most frequencies, except for an increase to 45 ohms in a broad band centered at 90 Hz. The ATH-AD900 offers little isolation — no surprise for a large open-back headphone. Distortion is low at 80 dB; at 100 dB, it rises below 70 Hz to 15.7% at 20 Hz. Average sensitivity from 300 Hz to 10 kHz with a 0.179-volt RMS signal is 104.4 dB.
If the unusual fit of the ATH-AD900 suits your head, and its bass-shy balance suits your taste in music, this headphone is a fantastic bargain: I noticed it selling for just a tad under $200 from some Internet dealers.










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Hook a simple rubber band around the 'wings' and that will provide enough tension to help eliminate the 'droopy' feel that they will slip down too far. Cheap fix for an otherwise great series of phones.