Although it might look like a regular headset, one highlight about it is the
bass control levels that allows you to enhance the lower frequencies through three levels.
The earphones have direct volume and
bass control and operate up to 30ft away from your device.
The
bass control works as specified in company literature, starting around 500-700 Hz, and is pleasantly mild but effective all the way down to the upper 30s, by which point the total swing is +3/-5 dB.
If you overdo it and the neighbours start complaining there is a
bass control on the sub-woofer.
The good thing is with a bit of mucking about in your equalizer settings, coupled with finding the perfect bass level on the Z625's own
bass control, you'll find that despite the powerful bass the dialogues aren't muddled either.
After even more experimenting, I ended up setting the speaker's brilliance control to almost zero, and the
bass control to between three and four on a scale of ten.
This dial unit even has inputs for headphone and a line-in, but no
bass control. The build quality of this control pod though is not upto the mark.
Dynamics seem virtually unlimited, and
bass control and power are without peer.
This smart black Panasonic (RQV 161) pounds 29.95 from Comet, comes with auto reverse, treble and
bass control.
It also packs along a super volume knob and a white LED ring with treble and
bass control coming on the side panel.