Audio-Technica ATH-AD700 Correction Circuit


These are mid-priced (~$150) "Open-Air" headphones which have strong following among head-fi enthusiasts. Among the general consensus are high-resolution, airy and transparent sound. I heard them first when JP Howard  brought them to my house a few years ago and was immediately impressed.

I guess being open-aired they do not have to deal with back pressure from the typical cups, and for me the appeal is dipole-like neutrality. There is less fatique because the ears would not be pressurised by the bass too much. The disadvantage is, of course, other people will hear the songs you are playing!

Upon hearing the headphones after their arrival, I noticed they sound too bright for my liking. Hence I measured them as per above photo.

From the impulse response we can see that the headphones exhibit strong resonances at 5khz and 10khz with a rising trend to the frequency response. This explains the bright sound of the headphones.

Raw nearfield measurement of ATH-AD700

Although looking non-flat, these are actually typical response for headphones. They are basically 2" fullrange transducers and would experience breakup at some point. Compare with Stereophile's measurements of AKG K530, Audio-Technica ATH-AD700, Beyerdynamic DT440, and Grado SR80 here.

The response can be improved by utilising passive EQ consisting of 1.56mH inductor. Effectively a 1st order lowpass filter with corner frequency of ~5khz.

Schematic diagram of ATH-AD700 Passive EQ.
The parts can be obtained from Jaycar in Australia, or any other electronics shops.
note: you can also use single 1.5mH inductor from SoundLabsGroup.

Finished Passive EQ

Measured acoustic output of ATH-AD700 when equalised with Passive EQ.
There is very little noticeable loss as higher gauge inductors (0.8mm/20AWG) are used.

Perceptually the headphones now sounds very natural. 

Of course as with all headphones they still exhibit high spatial distortion. That is ... the sound seems to emanate from inside the head. So they are not a true replacement for proper loudspeakers.

Discussions on this EQ are in HeadFi and SNA.

Other measurements of interests:

2nd, 3rd, and 4th Harmonic distortions


Burst response




ARCHIVES

Below DSP eq was Archived on 29/5/12.
Passive EQ above is preferred due to its simplicity.

These can be improved by applying two notch filters. I do not have separate headphone amplifier on-hand so the equalization process utilised external pink noise. Not ideal, but close. I would revisit this later on.

EQ1: fo = 47780hz, Q = 1.86, Gain = -2.2dB
EQ2: fo = 11,669hz, Q = 1.10, Gain = -8.2dB

Pink noise measurement of ATH-AD700
Blue = Before EQ, Black = After EQ

I use Foobar2000 VST Plugin and TDAe EQ2004P parametric equalizer to prototype the notches.










9 comments:

Unknown said...

Hey, Gainphile! I was searching for Audio-Technica monitor headphones in my town. However, there was no such headphones, so I've bought ATH-AD700 because of fairly flat response and a great soundstage. I really liked it, the sound was awesome and detailed, but I was was about to return it because of non-flat response, which I need as a music producer. I like it very much and I don't want to give it back. So, if I use such passive EQ, will I be able to use 'em as a monitor headphones? And if I can, please, could you explain, how do I make this unit? Many thanks in advance.

gainphile said...

Hi Timofey, I think it will be accurate enough as studio monitor. To make this unit you need a soldering iron and the mentioned Inductors. It should take under 1 hr. Let me know if you need more help.

Roman said...

Hi Gainphile! Did you happen to test A900? Perceptionally they have similar problem sounding too harsh in treble. If i'm lucky could you show the filter data for A900? Thanks a lot man. Roman.

gainphile said...

Hi Roman, I do not have the A900 so I cannot pot a filter data.

Anonymous said...

Hi, a good idea and an interesting article. However regarding the AD700, I don't think you did the right thing (except to match your personal preference in sound). If you deduct the HRTF curve from the AD700 raw response, you actually get a curve somewhat lacking in the 2k to 7k region, and about right at 10kHz. See the Stereophile link Fig 6. So if you wanted more accuracy, a bit of boost is needed between 2k and 7k Hz. (I have the same 'phones and don't use any correction actually). cheers, Newman.

Christopher said...

Oh - definately don't try to measure both sides at once by placing the mic in the middle, measure one side at a time so you don't get high frequency echos and cancellations!

And, of course the bass measurement will not be accurate unless the headphone is pressed onto some surface creating at least some seal.

Would love to see that kind of measurement. I'm thinking of getting either these (for $99 @ Amazon) or the AD500 for $59.

--
Christopher

Mid said...

Hi, can this equalizer be implemented from sound card settings? I don't have access to the materials required, hence asking.

Anonymous said...

For anyone looking to reproduce these on a pc using windows I recommend "Equalizer APO" + "Peter's equalizer APO Configuration Extension"(lets you control the EQ easily). This works almost with no delay on software, pretty impressive actually.

Unknown said...

Thanks for sharing the info, keep up the good work going.... I really enjoyed exploring your site. good resource...
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