Sennheiser HD555

The HD555s are terrific for listening to movies but aren't exceptional performers with music.


9.7
User Rating


The HD555s are terrific for listening to movies but aren't exceptional performers with music.

Sleek, comfortable, and durable, Sennheiser's Euro-styled HD555 headphones weigh a mere 260 grams feel luxurious. They exerted minimal pressure on our ears, which allowed us to forget at times that we were even wearing them -- a big compliment for headphones.

The Sennheiser HD555s, which cost less than AU$250 online, have an open-backed design that makes for spacious audio, but the 'phones leak sound and may disturb others in your vicinity. The HD555s are fitted with a 3m cable and a 6.3 mm plug; a 3.5mm miniplug adapter is also included.

These headphones' wide-open sound is ideal for DVDs, eliminating the inside-your-head effect common to most 'phones and providing the sort of layered depth and imaging we normally hear from speakers. Seabiscuit sounded glorious: the pounding hooves, the roaring crowds, and the sweeping musical score were all well served by the HD555s. Dialogue was perfectly clear and bass response was deep and powerful. On our reference Grado SR125 headphones, the sound was more immediate and clear but significantly less open and comfortable.

While we were impressed by the HD555s' home-theatre performance, its music reproduction fell a bit short. On Jazz Descargas, a CD of passionate Afro-Cuban percussion, the HD555s sounded a little too sweet and laid back, as the 'phones softened the interplay between the drummers. Aerosmith's blues CD, Honkin' on Bobo, also sounded a tad restrained for our tastes. We preferred Sennheiser's more vivid HD 280 Pro headphones.

Things changed again when we hooked up our iPod to the HD555s. The rich sound was irresistible, and the generous bass balance brought out the best in all sorts of music. We did not, however, have the same kind of luck with our Jens of Sweden MP-110. The comparatively underpowered player didn't fare as well as the iPod -- it just couldn't pump out enough volume for the HD555s.

In short, if you're a music lover who demands vivid, detailed sound from your headphones, the HD555s probably aren't for you; consider the Sennheiser HD 280 Pros instead. But if you want great home-theatre sound without waking the neighbors, the HD555s are calling your name.


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irronan posted a comment   
Australia

The Good:exelelant value for money!

The Bad:open back lets sound out, not noise cancelling.

i picked up a pair of these on the week-end without reading any reviews, infact im listening to my ipod with them as i speak, they are exelant...i am not going to lie. for $200au i am pretty much realllly happy with them.

Ken Clements
10
Rating
 

Ken Clements posted a review   

The Good:clarity and sound separation. Comfortable and stylish design. performance performance performance

The Bad:being wired.. the only thing that can make these phones better is being wireless (but that in itself reduces the quality). So bang for buck, these are the best VALUE for money on the market.

Sennheiser in my opinion are the world leaders in headphone design. Unlike alot of other companies whom seem to dabble in headphone design. Brilliant headphones that are as good as some of the $900 headphones but a fraction of the cost.

bob
9
Rating
 

bob posted a review   

The Good:Comfortable (circumaural) for long listening sessions.
Excellent sound for the price when plugged into a variety of sources.
Excellent price.
Open back headphones = natural, realistic sound, a must for anybody who enjoys listening to music, watching movies, and playing games.
Decent length cord ending in a 6.3 mm jack, so fits right into any self respecting amp.
3.5 mm adapter for use on computers, portables, and a pretend hi-fi.
Durable, the headband can twist to uncomfortable angles without getting damaged or deformed.
Mostly (see cons) sleek, inoffensive styling.

The Bad:3.5 mm adapter is a simple solid adapter, and adds approx 5 cm onto the length of the plug (cumbersome). You'd be better off buying a flexi adapter.
The sennheiser logo on the headband is HUGE, but this is only an issue when you're not wearing the headphones.

If you listen to music, movies and/or games for any reasonable number of hours per week, and you have something to plug these headphones into that ISN'T a wimpy little mp3 player (ipods fare quite well though) then you will be happy with these headphones, unless you're use to using $900 headphones. For the rest of us who don't have money exploding out of our wallets, you can pick these up from a good electronics store for around AU$170, and boy are they worth it. Granted, they aren't the best (ie not $900) but they certainly fit the bill if you want excellent sound for various forms of entertainment at a great price.

uldan
10
Rating
 

uldan posted a review   
Australia

The Good:Everything

The Bad:CNET review and Steve G.

This review by Steve G is ridiculous! These headphones are absolutely great, and generally the "open design" headphones sound better and crisper than the "Closed design" If it is about the sound quality what the sound escaping out to bother others has to do with anything? These are the best headphones for the price and the music sounds exceptional, I rediscover my music every time when I put them on.

Very Concerned Consumer
9
Rating
 

Very Concerned Consumer posted a review   

The Good:Unbelievable price.
Great sound on your ipod.
AWSOME sound when amped.
Comfortable.
Good looking.
Sturdy.

If these budget headphones don't knock your socks off, your not wearing socks.

The Bad:reviewed by Cnet.com

I understand the subjective nature of reviews, but good god, it pains me to think that many people will read, and believe, the Cnet review. That peculiar "open-backed design" listed as a con makes it sound like a design flaw, kinda like faulting a pickup for not being a sedan. As for the "so-so music performance," I would like to point out that these are stereo headphones, designed to be powered by more than a dinky little ipod. I have a sneaky suspicion that the discrepancy between home theater and music preformance mentioned in the review may have been due to the home theater system powering the headphones, as opposed to an ipod. Yes, to really shine, these headphones need real juice. Let that be an indication of what these headphones are. Serious headphones, for seriously awesome sound quality. Yea, you can buy better headphones, but for the 99% of the population that would rather spend half the money for nearly all the performance, these cans absolutely rock. While an amp raises these phones to near-audiophile quality, a decent computer sound card, or a decent mp3 player, will still give you awesome sound. I dont now, maybe the reviewer took the price as an indication of the headphones purpose, and quality. True, if you had to amp your twenty dollar earbuds to get any quality, it would be riddiculous to give the headphones credit for that quality. But, fortunately, the HD555s are not earbuds, and while unamped performance is certainly much better than so-so, that assessment is not absolutely, hideously wrong. What is hiddiously wrong, is failing to mention that when amped, these cans are comparable to all but the top end of the market, all while being at the low end in pricing. Look around a bit, these phones can be had for 250 along with a killer travel sized amp, it very well might be your budget entry into audiophile obsession.

Alibek Makhmudov
9
Rating
 

Alibek Makhmudov posted a review   

Essentially, most of headphones do have some genres where they do their best. Sennheiser HD 555 proved that with its accurate, yet mild tone, mighty to create a mash, once you get to something extremely loud and heavy. Fans of metal and heavy rock might be disappointed with these cans.

On the other hand, they turn AMAZING once you listen to the solos and ensembles. In my case, the CDs 'Hilary Hahn Plays Bach' (violin) and 'Verdi' by Andrea Bocelli were shining with the rich detail and tremble, showing great depth and environmental details.

Also, the sound of cello is vibrant on HD555. Album 'Brahms: Duble Concerto', featuring Yo-Yo Ma, actually turned to sound excellent as for the entire quartet.

Moving on to the larger groups, 'Vivaldi: Concertos for the Emperor' by 'English Concert' Baroque Orchestra had clear high tones, as well as kicking bass of contrabass and violoncello on HD555s. Yet, mid-tones and the peak moments when the entire group is playing ff, sound loses the detail - but still being decent.

Dynamic Range is wide, nevertheless, again, Sennheiser HD 555 aren't well suited for very loud output. Whenever it's too loud, you can sense artifacts of diafrahm - but i consider it to be rather good feature - hence you'll invariably protect your ears.

Experiments with other genres - such as hip-hop/rap, didn't put shade upon 555s. After finding an optimal EQ set, most of intense tracks on 'Elephunk' by BEP, such as 'Hey Mama' or 'Smells like funk' were really speaking volumes.

Almost everytime when needed, bass is present, yet it does not give much of tremble. Trust me, it is not as bad as it seems at first when reading a review. I had the same fear of low tremble... it is present, besides, it is not quite the same as BOSE TRI-PORT, which actually do have good tremble, however, the HD555 sound a lot more vibrant and rich.

In overall, I am very happy with the HD 555s, especially when it comes to classical music. If you're a fan of string solos or volcals (sorry I haven't tested it on winds yet;) - it's a TRUE high-end sound for less than $140.

I love them.

Anonymous
1
Rating
 

"just buy it already"

Anonymous posted a review   

Bob
1
Rating
 

"Great after break-in !"

Bob posted a review   

These headphones sound much better after break-in and a good amp.

Anonymous
1
Rating
 

"Perfect"

Anonymous posted a review   

Anonymous
1
Rating
 

"excellent"

Anonymous posted a review   




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User Reviews / Comments  Sennheiser HD555

  • irronan

    irronan

    "i picked up a pair of these on the week-end without reading any reviews, infact im listening to my ipod with them as i speak, they are exelant...i am not going to lie. for $200au i am pretty much r..."

  • Ken Clements

    Ken Clements

    Rating10

    "Sennheiser in my opinion are the world leaders in headphone design. Unlike alot of other companies whom seem to dabble in headphone design. Brilliant headphones that are as good as some of the $900..."

  • bob

    bob

    Rating9

    "If you listen to music, movies and/or games for any reasonable number of hours per week, and you have something to plug these headphones into that ISN'T a wimpy little mp3 player (ipods fare quite ..."

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