iPhone

Sennheiser MM 50 for iPhone

By Joseph Hanlon on 04/09/2008

More Sennheiser reviews , RRP: AU$99.95

The good:

  • Excellent sound quality, especially at the low-end
  • Strong hands-free calling performance
  • Noise-blocking sufficient for everyday situations
  • Affordable

The bad:

  • Can be uncomfortable after long periods of wear
  • Not compatible with all brands of mobile phone

The bottomline:

Compared to the headphones bundled with Apple's iPhone 3G the MM 50s are light years ahead. Exceptional sounding bass and its affordable price tag make the MM 50 a great choice for replacing those dodgy Apple ear buds.

Editors' rating:

8.2/10

Users' rating:

7.5/10

Design
Out of the box the MM 50s are an unremarkable looking set of headphones, as most in-ear 'phones tend to be. They feature an asymmetrical cable design with 1m and 1.3m length cabling, in-ear headphones with rubber tips and a small receive-call button and microphone located at the position where the cable separates for each ear, sitting on your shoulder just below your chin.

Sennheiser bundles three sizes of rubber ear-buds with the MM 50; small, medium and large. As with most in-ear headphones the MM 50s take a bit of wearing to get used to, and we don't feel the headphones are comfortable enough to wear for more than a few hours. They are very lightweight though, making them perfect for wearing to the gym, if you don't mind the small microphone bobbing about as you jog or cycle.

With the assistance of the rubber ear tip, the MM 50s offer what Sennheiser describes as "noise blocking". While this isn't complete noise cancellation it does make things sufficiently quiet to block out the jabbering of the various "friendly" strangers you tend to encounter on public transport, or dare we say, at the office.

Performance
Sennheiser knows its business, especially if you intend to entice people to spend extra money on headphones to replace the ones that were bundled with a phone or music player at no extra cost. The MM 50 is substantially better; expressing a quality of sound far superior to the comparatively shoddy ear buds that come in the box with Apple's iPhone and iPod range, and headphones that come bundled with all music playing hardware for that matter.

The most significant difference is the MM 50's extraordinary bass reproduction. Unplug the iPhone headphones and plug in the MM 50s and you'll hear it immediately. The tone is warm and rich, though it leans towards the low end frequencies, delivering deep bass and hard-hitting mids while sacrificing the treble slightly. Most people won't mind this sacrifice, especially people who tend towards bass-thumping dance tracks or ear-bleeding metal, and we found this attention to the low end helped make the audio during calls clearer.

We also discovered that the MM 50 isn't compatible with all the major mobile phone brands, specifically Nokia handsets featuring 3.5mm headphone jacks. During our tests we connected the MM 50 to the Nokia N95 8GB and N82 and both produced a loud buzz and wouldn't playback any audio. We successfully tested the 'phones with the Sony Ericsson W380, via an adapter, and the iPhone 3G. Both produced an excellent sound whether we listened to music or during calls. In fairness Sennheiser is only promising compatibility with the iPhone, though this does seem remarkably short-sighted.

Overall
For the RRP of $99.95, the Sennheiser MM 50 headphones make an excellent and affordable replacement for the underwhelming Apple bundled ear buds. If you plan to use the MM 50 with another brand of phone, be sure to take your phone into the store with you when you buy them, or keep the receipt in a safe place in case you have any difficulties.

Like this article? Click below to send it to your mobile for free!

Mafesto
24/10/2008, 12:02 PM

rating
7
/10

Just bought a pair of these and the sound is brilliant but the clicker and microphone dont seem to work with the 2.1 software update, took back to the store, tried another pair and still no good. User rating would be a 9 if the mic worked.

Pros: Great sound, good noise cancellation.

Cons: Hard to hear yourself talking.
Seems the 2.1 software has rendered the mic and clicker useless.

Report offensive comment

Timmy
06/09/2008, 07:44 PM

rating
6
/10

"and headphones that come bundled with all music playing hardware for that matter."

Oh yea right u ever seen mdr-ex-082s bundled with walkmans?

Report offensive comment

jonappleseed
05/09/2008, 11:51 AM

rating
8
/10

Good for music, poor for iphone users...

Pros: Great sound quality for music, amazing bass levels and comfortable fit

Cons: in-ear noise isolation makes talking through the microphone very uncomfortable/guesswork. Its like talking with your fingers in your ears - you cant judge how loudly you are talking.

Report offensive comment

M.
04/09/2008, 01:44 PM

rating
9
/10

Ok so these headphones do sound pretty good BUT, i really don't see what the fuss is about Apple's poor iPod headphones. I think they're FINE for the average user!

Report offensive comment

  • Leave a comment

All fields marked with * are required

What do you think

Rate this product:

Need help? Read our guidelines for what each number rating represents.

Your e-mail will not be displayed

You must read and type the 6 chars within 0..9 and A..F

You must read and type the 6 chars.

  • Bose mobile on-ear headset

  • Top in-ear headphones for MP3 players

  • Oi!: Logitech's new line-up provides aural pleasure

  • Photos: Ears-on with the Sennheiser IE8, IE7 and IE6

  • Sony MDR-NC500D Digital Noise Cancelling Headphones

  • Klipsch Image X5 headphones

  • Sennheiser MM 50 for iPhone

  • Super Monkey Ball

  • Philips SHE9850 sound-isolating earphones

More articles »

Find the right mp3 player

Brand
  • Multiple options can be selected

    Membership benefits

    Create a personalised homepage

    Create a personalised homepage

    Choose your interests from our 16 categories and only see articles relevant to you. Sign up for a free CNET Australia membership now!