Hi-Fi World – September 2019

(Barré) #1
FOSTEX TH909
£1500

EXCELLENT - extremely
capable.

VERDICT
Fine quality but few cable
options.

FOR


  • punchy bass without
    exaggeration

  • cable and ear-
    pads replaceable

  • comfortable to wear


AGAINST


  • little consideration given to
    portable users

  • recessed treble


Fostex
+44 (0)3301 222500
http://www.scvdistribution.co.uk/

http://www.hi-fiworld.co.uk SEPTEMBER 201 9 HI-FI WORLD 41


REVIEW


and-socket arrangement. For long
life, contacts are rhodium-plated. As
standard, Fostex supplies a chunky
3m cable terminated at the other
end in a standard 6.3mm jack plug.
Fine for ‘normal’ headphone amps



  • but what about the balanced
    connections currently voguish in the
    upper echelons of personal listening?
    The company’s website reveals that
    TH900 cables are compatible with
    the TH909, and so the existing 3m
    ET-H3.0N7BL XLR cable (£260) can
    be used, but few portable players
    use XLR so an adaptor cable will
    be needed. There’s no cable with a
    3.5mm plug either, officially at any
    rate. If you want to partner the
    TH909 with a personal player you’ll
    need an adaptor – hardly ideal.
    There’s better news elsewhere.
    The earpads that, according to
    Fostex “adopt a low-resilience
    cushion to achieve a comfortable fit
    and the best audio performance” are
    detachable. In the US, replacements
    (EX-EP-99) sell for a very reasonable
    $80. Cables and earpads are the
    items most likely to deteriorate.
    That said, a sturdy carrying case
    isn’t supplied in the rather large
    box. Instead, you get a bag-like affair

  • and a ST300 desktop stand, on
    which the TH909 is perched when
    not in use; it’s evident that dust
    worries and portable use aren’t on
    Fostex’s radar.
    The 50mm drivers push and
    pull diaphragms are made from
    a proprietary “Biodyna” material,
    described by Fostex as a “bio-
    cellulose and inorganic fibre


admixture”. The implications
are said to be a “wide dynamic
range with low distortion...a rich
low-frequency, natural mid-range
and excellent reproduction of
highs”. Fostex claims a 5Hz-45kHz
frequency response. Their 25 Ohm
impedance is very low – most
headphones fall into a 40-300 Ohm
band – so they need a decent
headphone amplifier.


PERFORMANCE
I tried the TH909 with Chord Toby
TT and Prism Callia DAC/headphone


amplifiers, fed
digitally from
a Cambridge
CXN v2 playing
FLAC CD rips and hi-
res music held on a NAS. Using a
3.5mm-to-6.3mm adaptor the TH909
worked fine with a FiiO X3 personal
player. I encountered no problems
with drive, headroom or dynamics


  • but an adaptor is a burden.
    Initial listening impressions
    were of deep bass unexaggerated
    or overhung; the TH909s were
    particularly effective with pipe
    organs and modern electronic music
    such as Remurdered, from Mogwai’s


Rave Tapes album; 24/96 FLAC. Their
midrange is perhaps a little forward,
which helps to highlight vocals in the
mix; every word of Pixx’s delicious
slice of articulately-feminist guitar-
tinged electro Andean Condor
(Small Mercies, FLAC rip) was
discernible.
Yet this key mid-range region
was neither coloured or unnatural,
as listening to speech on BBC Radio
4 (320kbps AAC stream) proved.
Treble, although capable of filigree
detail, was a tad subdued – bright
these headphones are not! Hi-hats

and
electronic
percussion were nevertheless
crisp and clean, while brass
instruments like trumpets retained
bite.
The urgency of, say, Steve Reich’s
Music For A Large Ensemble (ECM
FLAC rip) or Radiohead’s Burn
the Witch (A Moon Shaped Pool,
FLAC rip) was a delight to behold.
Rhythms, for example the one that
underpins the aforementioned Pixx
track, flowed nicely.
Also impressive was the intimate
performance space that the TH909
created between my ears. This
convinced with evening concerts
from BBC Radio 3 (320kbps AAC
stream), including a performance of
Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante, and
the 24-bit LSO/Naseda recording of
Britten’s War Requiem. The TH909’s
excellent resolving power, dynamics
and natural tonality did justice to
these complex forms of music.

CONCLUSION
Although the TH909s lack the
absolute finesse of the world’s
very best ‘phones – notably Focal’s
Utopia that I use – enough detail is
resolved to draw you into the music
without unduly laying bare the flaws
of the recording.

"impressive was the intimate


performance space that the


TH909 creates between your


ears"


£

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