Sony MDR-V300 Monitor Series Headphones with Folding Design

Electronics : Sony MDR-V300 Monitor Series Headphones with Folding Design

Sony MDR-V300 Monitor Series Headphones with Folding Design

from: Sony



 : Sony MDR-V300 Monitor Series Headphones with Folding Design
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List Price: $49.99
Our Price: $39.37
You Save: -$10.62 (21%)
Prices subject to change.


Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 2 days




Binding: Electronics
Brand: Sony
EAN: 0027242545410
Label: Sony
Manufacturer: Sony
Model: MDRV300
Publisher: Sony
Studio: Sony
Warranty: 1 year warranty



Editorial Review:






Features:
  • Supra-aural design for excellent listening comfort
  • Folding design for compact mobility; extremely lightweight (4.1 oz.)
  • 30 mm diameter drive units for delivery of broad frequency range
  • Double-sided oxygen-free copper cord; 10 feet long (3 meters)
  • Reversible earcups for single-sided monitoring





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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Highly recommended!
I absolutely love these. They are very comfortable. They have great sound, the base is surprisingly strong for the price. They do a reasonably good job blocking out noise; they do a fantastic job at not leaking sound (people nearby don't hear it). I'm very happy with these for the price (I paid $32). I would get them again / recommend them if you are looking for headphones in the price range.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Not perfect, but very good!!
Looking for good headphones for my iPod I came across these. Sound quality (to my ears) is rather good and clean, with deep bass (very good for synthesized dance/electronic music or neo soul music which are usually bass heavy, but my Jazz and Rock sounds great too).

Lightweight, it fits snugly over my head and onto my ears and in an office or home environment, blocks out most of the surrounding sound, leaving you to hear just your music. It doesn't block out much subway or airplane noise though.

On the downside, the much touted foldability doesn't fold it down to miniscule proportions as I'd hoped, and I find I have to wind up and tie up the 3m long cord. Other than these minor gripes, I'm a happy camper!




Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Super-glue not included
The MDR-V300's are only the second pair of Sony headphones I have owned since I had to retire my my old "Studio Monitor" series pair I had for many years. My only complaints are the cheap plastic headbands and the earpads. The cord and the drivers outlast the headbands. The cord never came apart and the drivers sounded fantastic just like the day I bought them, after so many years of use. But not long after owning them the plastic starts to crack and split here and there. I have had to always keep a bottle of super-glue near by just for this purpose. Im sure down the road my V300's (which I have glued many times already) will endure the same, and I will be left with yet another pair of drivers and a cord to toss away.

Earpads on the other hand are comfy but made out of the thinest and cheapest material and tear very easily. A piece of garbage bag would have lasted longer. I think for the price Sony could at least toss in an extra pair. Like headphones used to back in the 80's... remember?

But the sound is what makes me put up with all this and for that reason alone, I will continue to buy.

So, hey Sony, how bout some better headbands and I will give you 5 stars next time... deal?



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Far Better For the Money
Before I got into and started collecting headphones, this was the set I used. If you want the short of it, there are several better options than the V300 for the money. It is generally a dark and boomy headphone. It is also fragile. Though mine haven't yet broken, a common site with these headphones is a broken gimbal joint on one of the cups and/or cracked and flaking earpads. In their defense, I think they have a rather beefy cable -- albeit a studio length cable which makes them a hassle for portable use. They are also very comfortable.

There are far better options for this amount of money and less. Most of the Koss line immediately springs to mind, particularly the KSC75 and Pro35a. I also recommend the Sennheiser HD201 (which Sennheiser has apparently recently improved on in the HD205, but I don't have personal experience with it) and the Sennheiser PX100. If you want to stick with a Sony, I would recommend you perhaps hold out for the slightly more expensive, certainly more venerable, V6/7506 (NOT to be confused with V600!).



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - very good headphones
headphones are great for ipod or cd players volume is descent and earpieces are comforable for the person who works out and uses music for motivation . good headphones



read more customer reviews on Sony MDR-V300 Monitor Series Headphones with Folding Design


 





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Sony MDR-V300 Monitor Series Headphones with Folding Design

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