Re-engineering headphones
I'm not sure whether this is a valid topic, or if it resonates with millions of others. In listening to a few online talks, I realize again my headphones have lost hearing in the right ear.
It's generally kicking the cord I think when I get up for a coffee. That's my working theory anyway. Sometimes seems to break.
But my question is, would it be worth a kickstarter to re-engineer headphones? Every pair I've bought seem to self-destruct within 1-6 months, and that strikes me as a bit fragile.
Are there more durable headsets out there? Is it an engineering flaw? I'll chip in my over 5 seconds of engineering experience with: "The wire needs to be more robust in the face of aggressive, beer-driven behaviour".
Typing this with my left hand holding an important bend in the wire of my headphones, listening to the Portal 2 finale song. Yes, I just beat it. Yes, I'm behind the times :)
8 comments
[ 4.3 ms ] story [ 18.2 ms ] threadI wasn't sure if its just a matter of them being made with an expiry date or if there's better ones out there, but I'll check those out, cheers.
Also, why you have the cord running down by your feet where you can kick it? Buy a $5 extension cable at Radioshack and plug your headphones into that, you silly person..
Pay $100-ish and get a quality pair. I've had the same one for about 5, maybe 6 years, still works flawlessly.
As for your second question, always worth trying Kickstarter if you think its worth competing.
What I've since done is use an extension and reroute my audio cables behind my desk and aligned them the the monitor. I then plug my headphones into the extension instead. The cord is messy on the table though
I've never broken a pair. Most of mine seem to have some natural protection, through either detachable cables, wrapping above the ear, shirt clips, or recables. You are kicking the cord? The cord shouldn't be on the floor. Why not put it on a table?
If a headphone has a detachable cable that screws in, that'd be the best by far. That and metal-on-metal framing. If that's not available cheaply, then a Kickstarter might be interesting.