森海塞尔HD800装配现场

标签:
hd800杂谈 |
分类: 耳机与耳放earphone |
Discover how Sennheiser makes headphonesWe visit
Germany to see how the £1,000 HD 800s are made
Sennheiser's all-new £1,000 flagship headphone, the
HD 800, is the company's most significant launch in its 63-year
history. It sits at the top of the renowned German manufacturer's
comprehensive product portfolio and, most significantly, approaches
the astonishing performance levels offered by the company's
legendary £10,000 Orpheus headphone system, albeit at a fraction of
the price.
TechRadar was invited to the HD 800's launch at
Sennheiser's headquarters just outside Hannover to see the product
being made by hand in the factory. Fittingly, for a £1,000
headphone, the HD 800 is the only model in the range to be made by
hand in Germany. The process takes around 45 minutes to
complete.
The most important step in the HD 800's manufacture
happens at the first workstation, where the transducer is formed.
This is the key to the headphone's performance; the new 56mm ring
radiator transducer is the largest of its kind in the market and is
integral to its sonic performance.
Early start
Work starts at 05:00am, where during a process
called tempering, the transducer's ring membrane is first created.
The membrane is formed from sheet material using air pressure and
is then heated, before being rapidly cooled.
The ring shape of the finished transducer is
critical to the HD 800's performance, as it's said to offer greater
control across a wide frequency range and suffer less from the
distortions that plague conventional designs.
With the membrane complete, the second task involves
spinning the voice coil wire. This is precision-wound by machine
and the finished coil is then hand-assembled to the back of the
membrane.
A precision magnet, which Sennheiser has made
nearby, is then carefully positioned behind the completed membrane
before the assembly is carefully sandwiched by the main chassis
(forming the ear-cup) at one end and the protector (which sits near
the ear) at the opposite ends.
Stage two involves carefully inserting the completed
transducer into Sennheiser's new high-precision stainless steel
gauze body, which forms the completed ear cup. A 'microfibre'
fabric then provides the cushioning against the ear.
In addition to the ring radiator transducer, a
second key element of the HD 800's performance lies in how the ear
cups are positioned. These are placed at a slight angle to the ear,
which Sennheiser's research has shown to give a more speaker-like
spatial sound, due to the way in which perceived sound reflects
around the outer ear.
The final stages
With the ear cup assembly complete, it is attached
to the main headphone body and headband at stage
three.
Unsurprisingly, the body is no ordinary material.
It's formed from a new type of aerospace-grade plastic, so
important it even has it's own name – Leona. Said to be
ultra-light, ultra-rigid, and as hard as titanium, the finished
body is supplied to the factory from an outside plastics
specialist, as the material is notoriously tricky to deal
with.
With the headphone nearing completion, the final
stages of assembly include careful checks and cable installation.
Not being a cable manufacturer, Sennheiser has also outsourced this
task to a local cable expert to its own specification:
high-performance, twin-core and Teflon-insulated.
Swiss-made, gold-plated jacks add the final touch of
luxury. The finished drool-worthy headphone is then comprehensively
tested before being packaged in an appropriately high-end
box.