Focal Bathys
Stereophile|February 2024
BLUETOOTH + WIRED HEADPHONES
ROGIER VAN BAKEL
Focal Bathys

Bluetooth headphones have brought me joy for years-sometimes a little too much. Once, while waiting for a flight at my regional airport, I switched on the active noise cancellation, closed my eyes, and got so sucked in by Elvis Costello's album Imperial Bedroom that I didn't hear the boarding calls. It was no fun texting my client that I'd missed my flight. I fibbed that I'd been stuck in traffic, because blaming Costello for delivering such an immersive triumph would've been uncouth.

Kind of blue

Bluetooth For all their convenience, headphones and earbuds have fundamental problems. Take their batteries (please). They're only fully rechargeable 300-500 times, which means that after just two or three years of moderate-to-heavy use, most people toss their depleted wireless ear-fi in a drawer and buy a new pair.

The regular, non-Bluetooth 'phones I find the most captivating are open-backed planar magnetics like my Audeze LCD-4 and HiFiMAN HE1000se. That means I'm out of luck when I travel, because those cans are big and dorky-looking, and the planar Bluetooth products I'm aware of are all closed-backed. That's understandable-indeed essential-due to the need to block out high levels of background noise, and because in public, your music shouldn't bother others.

This story is from the February 2024 edition of Stereophile.

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This story is from the February 2024 edition of Stereophile.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.