The idea behind this "burnout" of headphones is the belief that new headphones work best when they are already in use for a few hours, as parts of them are "resolved", so that the situation is forced.
It's like "giving yourself" a pair you just bought to better fit your foot. If this sounds unpleasant to you, it's because, effectively, the idea is a pseudoscience based on urban mythology and to no avail. But let's see why.
What is the heat on the heads of the phone?
As we mentioned, some audiophiles believe that the sound quality of newly purchased headphones improves after allowing them to run for a few hours. Obviously the burns will cause the moving parts to stabilize and reach & # 39; true clarity & # 39 ;, thus achieving excellent performance.
Prima facie, logic may seem like a good idea, as an engine era, because headphones have adjustable speakers embedded in them, and one of the urban legends in this regard is that some believe manufacturers cover paraffin fabric to maintain their integrity while in the waiting room. waiting to be sold (such as car tires).
The the process of burning consists of preparing a list of music or sounds with high frequency variability lasting between 20 to 40 hours in total, and add to the longer periods of pink and white noise (to refresh the frequency range. The process is to leave that music list and headphones played with an average volume of about 20- 40 hours
Some even recommend leaving the headphones for 500 hours straight, which is ridiculous. Some recommend that you use certain programs to make hot ones. The fact is that there is no standard, which is why this is nothing but an urban legend.
Does this really improve the sound quality?
Well, a while ago we were telling you that fiction based on pseudoscience and urban mythology, so no, it doesn't improve the sound quality at all, and the experiments performed by the recording studio show this: the fact is that there is only a difference in the first 5 minutes of use, when the coins are "warm", but when they cool down they return to their original state. Like a car engine, go for it.
The good part is that unless you shed head-on headphones (like putting on a pink sound for hours) it's not going to get hurt, and in fact what they give audiophiles to do is make this a placebo effect (they'll make sure they have better quality now), but nothing else.
So now you know: as much as they tell you that burning headphones improves audio quality, the fact is that it's nothing but a big waste of time.