Dunu Zen - Official Thread

Thanks for this @Dynamic. I found this very informative. The modularity of the Dunu Cables really appeals to me. The fact that you don’t get all the required connectors in one package is disappointing though.

I will be better off just getting the connectors separately and integrating them with my cable collection.

Only the duw-02 doesn’t come with them all. Total price with all 3 connectors would be $120. Not the end of the world. Although, headphones.com doesn’t have the connectors so you have to order them elsewhere.

It should also be noted: they have a usb-c connector made to connect to android phones. Acts as dac/amp (like an apple dongle). So literally, this could be the only cable you need. This connector is always sold separately. ( I have heard it comes with the luna, but I don’t know if that is true)

Neat stuff. I like dunu cables. I don’t see any point in experimenting further unless someone comes up with a better modular system. Currently I would just use one of these cables on any new favorite IEM I obtain. (Also, things like the odin coming with a $1300 cable is seriously frustrating when I know I will replace it with one of these). Given the personal nature of IEM accessories, I would love to see manufacturers offer IEM only purchase options.

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My Hart cables are very similar. I decided to test drive them on my current vacation, so I brought the headphone adapters for my Nio IEM and Sony noise canceling headphones, plus the 3.5mm adapter for my iPod Touch or Oppo DAC/amp. Similar to your experience with the Dunu cables, from an ease of use perspective, it’s so great to be able to connect and disconnect in seconds.

The downside of the Hart cables is that they are thicker than a typical IEM cable. The thickness doesn’t bother me and I was able to loop them around my ears with no issue, and wear them for hours, but I would imagine a lot of people would prefer the look of the Dunu.

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I love hart audio cables. But for IEMs I was worried about thickness. Hart audio cables should be the standard for all cables for over ear headphones. Headphones should just come with the 18” connector and you add extenders / adapters as you want.

Before I got rid of over ears I used 18” headphone to extender to connector. Intent was to buy 18” headphone side connectors for each headphone.

This is why I wanted the dunu. I was gonna try hart but 2-pin is a custom order. And I also don’t care to swap iems the same way i was going to swap over ears.

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But Hart only charges $2 per custom adjustment, whether it is changing adapter to 2 pin or customizing the color. Obviously it takes longer for custom orders, but I thought it was worth it for an extra $2.

But back to the thickness of the cable, IEMs are a tiny part of my listening experience, so it doesn’t really matter to me that they don’t look as slim as traditional IEM cables, but I can see others viewing this as a negative.

Edit: added photo so people can make up their own mind.

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It’s not the look, it’s the size around the ears. Not sure it would work well. Especially if/when I start wearing glasses again. I love the hart braided cables. Best ever if the size is ok.

But I love hart. So if I ever start swapping IEMs they will be high on the list.

Also, they cost more than a duw-03 for a fully modular setup for me. Dunu is about as easy since having the full cable dedicated to the IEM makes more sense than it does with over ears.

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Tip preview. Still a few more coming!

The four pairs on the left came with the Zen (no idea what they are). The four on the right are spinfit cp100, cp240, azla xelastec and comply 400.

Final type e and symbio w have yet to arrive. [update] Azla SednaEarFit also incoming.

The listening begins!

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The 3rd ones from the left look very similar to what I got with the Tin T2plus. Not too bad but Spinfit CP100 is more comfortable imo.

Very interested in how you like the Xelastecs.

The first ones on the left and the xelastec (2nd from the right) I have been using for more than a month and can tell you all about them. The rest have only gotten short a/b time with each other.

The first ones on the left slightly beat the xelastec in terms of usability. They are basically thicker stiffer versions of the spinfit. Basically they provide a similar fit to the xelastec but don’t have any adjustment period of the TPU molding to your ear shape. This also means constant going in and out interruptions are much better on the first ones on the left. For long listening sessions, the xelastec are absolutely awesome. And, I can literally use any size of xelastec. They basically let the Zen be the zen. I think the larger sizes do seem to enhance the bass ever so slightly, probably do to more material and isolation (maybe the bore size gets crushed a bit pushing up the bass slightly). Otherwise they have basically all the isolation of foam, and none of the down sides. Sound wise, the ones on the left and xelastec are pretty similar. (Spinfits are a bit different in initial a/b, but I don’t have all the words for that yet)

The others are still in progress. I know one I don’t like. :wink:

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Tips Review for Dunu Zen

Left to right: Zen bluish, Zen black, Zen spinfit clone, Zen foam, spinfit cp100, spinfit 240, Azla Xelastec, Comply isolation plus 400, Azla SednaEarfit, Symbio W

A preface: As I listened to all these tips, I honestly learned more about the Zen than I did the tips. The Zen has a quality to its sound that is generally not impacted much by the FR adjustments of the tips. Most had very little effect on what I enjoy about the Zen: it’s physicality. Could a tip change bass impact a bit? Yes, but surprisingly, I didn’t really care. It didn’t sound less involved, it was just slight less physically impactful. In fact, in one case it may have enhanced the sound.

Comply Isolation Plus 400 - These seem to match the Zen’s natural state. I think it probably enhanced the lower end just slightly, or possibly made the highs a little less prominent. Isolation is superb. I don’t like the “sound” foam makes as it adjusts. This does go away once it settles into your ear. These sound just a touch duller than the other materials. They seem to be taking away a bit of sparkle. Maybe foam absorbs something? Either way, foam isn’t my thing. For pure comfort, sure, but many of the others are just as comfortable for me.

Azla Xelastec - Since I had and used these quite a bit since day one of the Zen, they sound very natural to me. I think they are slightly more balanced than the comply. But that could easily be “used to it” type of assessment. Isolation is also very good. Comfort wise, they are just as good as comply for me and have no “adjustment” sounds, but they do have an adjustment period where I kind of have to push them back in until they mold to the ear. Fit is very good once that happens. That is also much less of an issue when you are using the “right” size. The only real flaw is when going in and out of the ear constantly, the adjustment is annoying. Foam is 30-60 seconds. These are minutes sometimes. Compared to many of the others, the bass is a bit more impactful particularly on the larger sizes. I can even use any of the six sizes without issue. Everything else feels balanced, nothing added, nothing taken away. This would easily be my tip of choice if I never ever had to take IEMs out for interruptions.

Spinfit cp240 - I think large are too big for my ears. They are not particularly comfortable, at least not for short periods. In fact, they are downright irritating. I can’t use them for more than 20 minutes in size large. They feel like they may have boosted both treble and bass almost? Everything is very clear. The bass feels full of impact. I actually really like the sound. I am ordering these in medium and small to see if that helps with the irritating, as I think this is my favorite sound so far (medium/small was only marginally less irritating) Everything is just slightly pushed to the next level. Probably something equivalent to V shaped with great isolation.

Spinfit cp100 - Probably a bit less bassy than most of the others on this list, not horribly so, and it certainly works for any music that isn’t all about that bass (gotta love a smurf). The mids and treble seem fine, not overwhelming but definitely the star of the show. Not as much isolation as the others. These are very hard to get on and off. I should probably order cp145 or other model to really test them out. I like the included tip better in most cases because it pushes bass a bit more. And the cp240 has a lot of what this has plus more bass (and irritation).

Zen included foam - again with the bassy. great for isolation and a bit of trebble reduction I think. I like the way the larger comply fit better than this. Comply mounts just a bit farther out on the ear and that somehow feels a bit better. But otherwise similar and for me, that makes it not very interesting. Pass on the foam.

Zen included spinfit clone - Not that different from the cp100. Brighter, less bassy but not in a bad way. Clearer and cleaner. Probably a good balance. I would probably choose a more bass emphasized option, but these might beat the spinfit version above.

Zen included weird black ones - These are terrible. Probably a fit issue but they are tinny hollow bassless messes. I mean, if you hate everything about what the zen is good at? use these. Sometimes when I insert them I get OK sound. But still very much lacking compared to the others. I feel like they included these for people that had no idea they were getting a stunningly good bass boosted IEM and wanted a boring bassless multi-ba IEM. Instant multi-ba conversion right here? :wink:

Zen included bluish ones - All around probably the most balanced. But I am the most used to them as I used these and the xelastec the most since I got the zen a month ago. They are quick, easy, sit nicely, don’t irritate and came with the Zen. Really, no issues. So much for spending $100 on tons of tips when the included ones are basically the best all-arounders. Go Dunu.

Azla SednaEarFit (normal) - These are another good in and out pair. They fit well and are comfortable. I assume they are silicon somewhere between the spinfit and the zen bluish ones I like. They have a pretty large bore and this appears to reduce the bass impact/slam a bit. But it sounds quite good. It’s almost like the Zen stepped toward a more planar sound letting its technical abilities shine a bit more than the raw bass power. Highs seem clear and unmolested. It’s like putting a spotlight on the Zen’s technical prowess instead of its power. Overall, another good option.

Symbio W - If I were to use foam tips, these are the ones. They are silicon covered foam which attempts to bring the best of both worlds. Do they? yeah, pretty much. These are “safe” tips. I have a feeling they would even fit in multiple sizes like the xelastec, but I only have large. They fit and fill more firmly like the firmer silicon, xelastec or foam tips, but they still have the consistency and relative ease of use that comes from silicon. Sound? probably dead middle between foam and the xelastec/zen bluish tips. Not quite like foam in squelching treble. But safe. From a pure sound perspective, I would probably lean in a different direction as those zen included ones are awesome. All the foam included ones seem to soften the sound in a way I don’t need it softened on the zen. So, absolutely awesome if you want that, for me I will probably stick with something else. One thing to add: When I put these in, I forget I have a mission of reviewing tips. It’s like the ultimate background music listening tips. Both comfortable enough to not draw attention to themselves and just play nice balanced music. This is good. Actually, it was similar with the sedna earfit as well. Both have that, just keep listening casual sound quality.

Summary

Except for the black one, the SQ differences were just variations. I wouldn’t be upset having to use any of them. They were all good. It was just different. It was like EQ that doesn’t make me cringe ( Oh, by the way, EQ makes me cringe ).

I think, given the experience with tips so far, I would pick them nearly exclusively based on comfort and functionality. This probably means not foam, and on the more isolating side. I ordered a few variations of things to try for fit reasons, but will probably post this before they come in. If it makes a world of difference, I will post an update.

A few things I think I learned so far:

  1. I prefer better isolation.
  2. Would rather have bass emphasis than not.
  3. Practical use is still more important than SQ differences.

At the end of the day, 3 tips have stood out to me: The Zen blue, Sednaearfit and Symbio W. Even the xelastec took a back seat simply because these 3 are less hassle for my use case.

A couple notes about the Zen: It is a very agreeable IEM at least for me. It can do no wrong. The more reviews and comparisons I read about it, the more I think “well crap, I got lucky. not sure a $4,000 iem with a similar signature is gonna beat this for me”. This is why I am spending time making the Zen sound as good as it possibly can. I am listening to the included spinfit clone tip right now on the blanche cable with the apple dongle. It’s not my favorite combination, but it still sounds amazing. I’ll have an idsd micro signature again soon to see if that makes a real difference in sound quality. I am kind of assuming that should top the SQ of a hiby r6 2020 or iBasso dx300 for me.

But tips? Tips are another part of this experience that I can choose mostly for practical reasons.

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Excellent writeup and comparison piece Dynamic. Great job.

Tips are extremely important for iems and often people just don’t put enough thought into them.

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I love the DUW-02 cable. Its relatively affordable and well designed and easy to handle. Perfect weight too.

The Blanche is my daily user for my Viento CIEM and i love how it looks and feels, but it is costly.

The DUW-03 is one of my least favorite cables, despite loving the Dunu system. It’s too stiff, thick, and heavy to use.

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I added final e type and a comply comfort plus 400.

Comply Comfort plus 400 - I really should have gone for 500. The 400 is hard to get on and off, and the way you squash foam it feels like they will get destroyed going on and off. Outside of that, I felt like these were a bit better across the board. They seemed to do less of the toning down that the isolation plus did. I tried them because they are a similar shape to most of my favorites, and I wanted to try foam in several sizes to see if another size would fix the sonic issues. It didn’t. They are fine, but I won’t choose them over the others.

final e type - I didn’t wait for these to arrive (late delivery) because I thought the dunu terrible black tips were clones of these. They are not. At least not in the largest size. While they look very similar to the dunu black, their characteristics are very different. Sonically, they are a cross between the Dunu bluish that I love and the Azla SednaEarFit. This makes them a seriously good option. In fact, they seem somewhat reminiscent of the cp240 minus all the discomfort. They have both bass and crisp, clear highs. The only real problem is they are a very tight fit. This and the cp100 are so hard to get on, that I sometimes skip them in the rotation.

Final e type are added to the Dunu bluish, Symbio W, Azla SednaEarFit as the go to tips. I will say I have been gravitating toward the SednaEarFit more than anything else since posting the initial review. They seem to grow on me the more I use them.

For the past day I have been going back and forth between the iDSD micro signature and iBasso dx300. I even re-subscribed to amazon hd to see if it is higher quality (spoiler: still can’t hear a difference vs apple music :man_shrugging:) I will say, that these two helped the less impactful tips. More to come on that on the iPhone friendly thread.

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Had the same experience. The large SpinFit cp240 seemed right when inserted, but became irritating after 20 minutes or so. I then purchased the medium (red) and small (light blue) and the mediums were perfect! Hope they work for you.

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Nope. Neither the medium or small were much better. :frowning:

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Final comparison shot.

The front center ones are the “winners”. The left is good and usable with stuff toward the front being preferred. The right is stuff I won’t use most likely. Also, ranked worst in the back with the best upfront.

I am not planning on trying anything else with the Zen at this time. Moving on to sources.

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I obtained cp145, cp155 and cp500 to add at some point.

Did you ever end up getting these? What do you think about the comparison?

I did, and several others. 155 and 500 are too big nozzles for most IEMs I have tried. cp145 and cp100/100+ are definitely favorites. The 145 shape can be a bit better depending on some factors (cp145 in medium is the only tip that worked for me on the unique melody 3dt).

My favorite tip is the e-pro horn shaped tips. Sometimes they don’t work well with a given IEM. but when they do, they are an incredible mix of comfort and sound. I use them on both my Zen and Timeless nearly all the time. And often on the oxygen. I do wish they came in between sizes. Six sizes would likely make them work on anything, just like the cp100/145 do. Many of the clone shapes of those that come with IEMs also work well for me.