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Posted

I made a long and detailed post elsewhere. The high points are:

The new model is moar better. More extended on top, better detail throughout the band, better background (or microdynamics), removable cable and nicer physical design.

They need a crapload of break in - a couple hundred hours at least - and as they break in, they may actually sound worse than straight out of the box.

I used a Richard Cheese album as an audio reference.

I was a hopeless fanboy for the 420, so if you don't like the 420, don't listen to me.

Shure SE-420 vs SE-425 (long) - Head-Fi.org Community

Posted
i personally find the idea of little balanced armatures needing hundreds of hours of roller coaster-esque mechanical break in to be highly dubious.

Some stuff doesn't seem to change much at all and some stuff does. Beats me why. In this case, I had the broadly similar 420s at hand, so the relative change over time, one against the other, was obvious. I never have bought the 'getting used to it' theory. That was controled out here in any case.

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