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Reviews (4)

Jan 20, 2020
Suitable as replacement leads for an M820B meter.
Had some broken leads on a meter I already own. The new leads will do the job well enough as a replacement.

Jun 02, 2017
Great Headphones for Bass-Oriented Music...
Firstly, Sony seems to have put a lot of thought into the bass output. There is an "air vent" at the top of each speaker- Sony refers to this as "Beat Response Control". With House style music, or thereabouts, these are the best phones I've had by far- though Ive never gone for a relatively "high end" product such as this before. Overall sound quality is great too to my ears, though bass is emphasised to some extent even without the "extra bass" button. I haven't even bothered using that- for most people it's probably a bit of a gimmick, and I think the bass is "meaty" enough (and damn enjoyable) without it.
YT reviews seem to put this unit on a par with similar efforts by Beats by Dre, Bluedio, Bose, Sennheiser etc., particularly in terms of bass.
You would most likely have to pay a lot more to get much better bass-wise. Blue Microphones Mo-Fi maybe? But the Mo-Fi isquite a bit heavier...
There is also the aspect of "sound stage"– apparent distance from which the sound originates. Probably quite acceptable with the 950BT for closed-back headphones, but I suggest people do their own research on this. Also some reviewers have noticed a significant difference in sound quality when the headphones are wired, vs. when BT connected.
The headphones are very comfortable, with plenty of padding, and the speakers angled backwards a bit. I would think this helps the listening experience, and combined with the padding also means there is more room for people with protruding ears.
The unit is aptX capable for people who want to take things that far...
The playback control buttons below the right-hand speaker seem quite intuitive.
Battery life not really tested, but I find the phones can last a week or so without needing a recharge, and I am using them most evenings.
A few cons/quibbles:
- A "build quality issue" in that the speakers are connected to the headband via a plastic swivel system. Some people have experienced breakages in this area. The phones might not be suitable in more "robust" situations.
- Some people might find the phones a bit bass heavy for TV etc.- some EQ work could get around this.
- The phones can be connected directly by audio cable, but this requires a semi-proprietary
plug with a small narrow section behind the actual connection points (bands). This idea seems fairly common amongst Sony headphones though, and possibly some other brands, so shouldn't be hard to replace if need be. It also provides a good "lock" for the plug.
- According to the manual, the unit is Bluetooth 3.0, which is a bit dated now I guess. I don't know if this affects sound quality much, but it does perhaps make the initial connection a little less straightforward than with v. 4.0 etc. (NFC also provided).
- The unit is not foldable though the speakers can be folded sideways as such in one direction. A later version, the 950B1/950BN1, improves on this.

Nov 04, 2015
Not usable on most PCs and notebooks
The Microsoft Wireless Display adapter is basically a proprietary solution. It uses "Intel WiDi" technology on a basis that restricts it to certain PCs and laptops (e.g the graphics adapter must be Intel, not nVidia, AMD etc.), and also some tablets and smartphones. Most PC/Note book users will have to use a different product.
My main annoyance apart from this is that it would probably work with a Galaxy Tab S I recently purchased, but the firmware would need to be updated first. In order to do that I would have to connect to it via WiDi in the first place using a "Miracast-compatible" PC/laptop! There is no USB update option- presumably the USB port on the adapter is power only, not data.
Obviously I can't actually test the quality of the device without being able to connect to it.