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Aiwa HP-CN6 Noise Cancelling Headphones - Design or manufacturing.
Date of Review: Jun 9, 2006
The Bottom Line: There are other models from different manufacturers that match in functionality and price. Nothing found in AIWA support site.
I bought my Aiwa HP-CN6 Noise Cancelling Headphones at Panam?! airport, kind of shopping mall in an airport. ItA's fun there because you find street hitting items at a good price.
But of course often when you buy at an airport, if you are in the middle of connecting flights, there wonA't be too much time for testing and checking, so i went to my international flight and opened my new headphone hoping in have a nice mp3 hearing while traveling with my also new Treo 650 and an adapter that i made for the micro headphones plug. But how big it was my surprise when plugged, activated the noise cancelling function and started to hear a uneven sound signal from the phone Portable Tunes application.
As itA's logical, the first thing i did was to switch back to no-noise position just to check that it wasnA't a problem of the song itself. Perfect sound flowed when noise cancellation function wasnA't operating. Then i swapped hearing position, left to right and right to left by simply rotating the headphones 180 degrees vertically. Same thing but this time in my right ear, sot it wasnA't a problem of my own ears. Asked to the person beside me to try and she noticed the same thing. Then i played a different song, just to check if it wasnA't a defect due to this particular song... It wasnA't. Same thing with several different songs, so what i did was to look for a monophonic mp3 file (found several 60A's oldies with this characteristic) and played. Again, a noticeable amplified noise in the left ear matching the outside ambient noise, while right ear was perceiving and enjoying the virtues of noise cancellation.
Then i blamed the connector that i made, so before after the plain was at cruise altitude, i took my laptop and started Media Player to check again. Same situation. Now i was convinced of a manufacturing defect. Unfortunately i made my way back to Bogot?! through Costa Rica, so i had not opportunity to change the headphones in Panam?!.
Then, at first, i associated remotely this with the problem that first transistor portable radios from Sony had in the beginnings when in its way to US had to pass through the Panam?! Canal, ruining part of its components because of a particular condition of humidity and heat. I knew also that this was mostly unprovable because of strict quality controls in most well recognized make manufacturers like Aiwa.
Then, back in Bogot?! i went to a store where i knew anybody may try an item before buy it, so i took the chance.
Same thing, same disgusting uneven sound in left ear in the second headphone tried. Two headphones probably well separated in time at manufacturing time. Then i get convinced that i was dealing with a design problem. Unfortunately, i went back to Panam?!A's Airport more than 90 days after purchase date, so my warranty was void. Then with no valid warranty i decided to disassemble the headphones and check if there was any tunable mini-knob (like an adjustable variable resistor or condenser), but found a monolithic circuit with nothing tunable. I assembled them again and definitely reach at the conclusion of a design defect on those ones.