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Decent headset with mic


Sherwood

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Hey headphone friends.

 

Despite my great affection for good headphones, the pair that spends the most time on my head are a cheap logitech headset with 2 miniplugs -- one for the mic, one for the headphones.  I interview visa applicants for five hours a day, and I wear those shitty headphones to do it.  I think it's time for a change.

 

Ideally, I'd like a new set that meets three criteria, in order:

 

1) Some kind of gate or filter to block excessively loud noises.  Applicants often hit the microphone on their side with papers, and it's like 120dB or white noise.  Sennheiser has ActiveGard on some business headsets, and this seems to do the job.

 

2) Professional-looking.  The interview thing is emasculating enough, to have to do it with bad headphones.

 

3) Wireless, if possible.  I'm envisioning an adapter with a pigtail that has two mini plugs on it.  I could plug it in when I go to the window, and take it with me when I leave.

 

Do any of you use headsets?  Have any suggestions?  The best I've found so far are these, though they are not wireless.

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I'd look into Sennheiser's aviation head-sets. Depending on budget you may find there one ear or both ear headphones with microphone, and even noise canceling ones. I have experience with none, but I've seen TV journalists using the HME-26 for car and motorbikes broadcasts. I guess they provide excellent noise protection and can be worn for hours. Probably more expensive than the set you looked at.

Edited by Torpedo
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Yep, Tyler could rock what is an open "pro gaming" headset, without looking like it was designed by a 12 year old

 

square_louped_PC360.jpg

 

Or the more recent  ( G4ME ONE , srysly) ... with the red accents

square_louped_G4ME-ONE-black-Shoot-01.pn

 

They have an inline volume control wheel , but maybe you should just plug the headphone out into something like

 

bass-limiter-boss-lm-2.jpg

 

:) , or can you route the audio through software , end EQ / compress / limit via software plugins ?

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It would have to be analog only (like the stompbox) because I am not allowed to use peripherals on our machines, for security purposes.  I'm pretty limited to the dual 1/8" (3.5mm) plug format for compatibility with an embedded system.

 

I could theoretically bring a self-contained system to run it through, but I would need to A) sneak it into a U.S. Embassy, and B) transport it every day from my desk to my interview window (which is not the same two days in a row, and is shared with other officers.)

 

So the USB sets are out, but I dig that HD595 clone.

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I'm sure the HD5xx sound awesome, and are comfortable, but I think they're too far ass the "professional-looking" mark.  I can't see myself wearing those while I tell someone face-to-face that, due to U.S. law, they're not able to go visit their child in the hospital, nor attend their eventual funeral.  A certain solemnity is necessary that I feel they lack.

 

I do like the auto-mute feature, though.  That would be useful.

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I'm sure the HD5xx sound awesome, and are comfortable, but I think they're too far off the "professional-looking" mark.  I can't see myself wearing those while I tell someone face-to-face that, due to U.S. law, they're not able to go visit their child in the hospital, nor attend their eventual funeral.  A certain solemnity is necessary that I feel they lack.

 

I do like the auto-mute feature, though.  That would be useful.

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We have a boatload of Senns and Plantronics at work. They both work well. The Sennheisers look better and the booms stay in place better. Both seem to last well. The Plantronics have great spare parts availability. I would cruise their respective catalogs to see if they have something to match your feature needs. I think both lines have a good selection of dongles to connect to phones, computers, or whatever. Good office headsets nowadays all seem to have a proprietary connector on the cable that connects to an interface dongle of some sort. I think that's a good thing. It would be a better thing I'd the connectors were standardized and the dongles interchangeable between brands, but such is life.

I'm with Tyll on aviation headsets. They're all made for very specific environments (very different for aircraft type and mission role). I love my DC H-10-56s, but unless you're interviewing people in the back of a helicopter while holding a camera against your face, they would probably be a really bad choice.

Maybe because of the amount of time I've doing the headset / camera thing, I've become a maniac about booms. Boom or tube, hinges or flexy, mic type, those things can either be a joy or really get under your skin. It's personal and situation specific. Me, I'm all about the boom staying put and coming back to the right place after I shove it away to answer another phone or something. YMMV

(Speaking of which, I'm not fond of Plantronics tubes, the older ones anyway. They don't stay by my lips worth a crap. Just sayin.)

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I'm sure the HD5xx sound awesome, and are comfortable, but I think they're too far off the "professional-looking" mark.  I can't see myself wearing those while I tell someone face-to-face that, due to U.S. law, they're not able to go visit their child in the hospital, nor attend their eventual funeral.  A certain solemnity is necessary that I feel they lack.

 

I do like the auto-mute feature, though.  That would be useful.

 

Why don't you go for one of the lesser Senns then? I've also tested the PC151s and – while that may be a bit too far at the other end – they sounded rather nice for the price, but then they look really bland and the build quality is very much on the simple side. It think it keeps the rotating mic with an auto mute feature, but then it doesn't have the handy volume control. Much more low key than the PC360!

 

I also keep the any-headphone-plus-Zalman-MC1 recommendation though, might well be your best bet cause it gives you a lot more freedom and doesn't loose much in other areas compared to regular headsets.

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