Many readers have been asking for audio testing on phones and tablets, and we are happy to be able to deliver it now. Because I live far away from Brian and Anand, I can’t easily access units they are reviewing so audio data may not run the same day a review is published. I do hope to be able to add it on to everything in the future so that all of our reviews will be as in-depth as possible, from processor to software, display to audio.

I also have to thank Audio Precision for their loan of the APx582 and their access to their offices and support staff. Without that these tests would not be possible. I also wanted to use their equipment as it is the reference standard for the industry and there can be no doubt about its quality. As I do a lot of AV testing as well, I found that more generic sound card methods of testing are becoming limited as the capabilities of products exceeds what they can easily measure. There are no such worries with the Audio Precision.

I also look forward to feedback from readers on the information here, and what else you would like to see tested going forward. Hopefully this will provide another set of data to help you determine if a product will fit your needs, and which vendors are trying to push performance in all categories.

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  • Origin64 - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    "Here we see that Beats is adding a +3.5 dB boost from 60 Hz to 90 Hz, but the deviation from 0 dB goes from 30Hz to 300 Hz. Past 6.5 kHz we also see a rise in the treble."

    And people pay 300 bucks for a headphone that does exactly, and only, this. Its a good joke, really.
  • willis936 - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    To Chris:

    Check out NwAvGuy's blog if you haven't already. He appeared and disappeared a few years ago bringing with him a headphone amp design and (more importantly) a breath of fresh, objective air in testing audiophile headphone equipment. He has some good data there and comparing testing methodologies might be insightful for things to try here on anandtech.
  • cheinonen - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    I've read his full blog and wish it was still updated.
  • Impulses - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    Tyll's Inner Fidelity blog is another great resource.
  • adityanag - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    This is excellent. Also the reason why I've been reading Anandtech since 1998. Keep up the great work, guys.
  • Gadgety - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    I appreciate this article, Chris. An improvement would be a summary table of all the models compared on one page, and some sort of analysis beyond the "poor performance" comparison. I've also seen data that the specs will change significantly for worse when headphones are attached to the phones.
  • xodusgenesis - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    Finally some in-depth audio anlysis. I've been waiting for this as I actually use my smartphone as a phone (I know shocker in today's age) and media player most of the time.
  • ZoSo - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    Would like to see some results of a few current WP8 phones, Nokia in particular.
  • asgallant - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    Awesome! I have been wanting to see some audio analysis done for a while now. Is there any chance of extending this to test audio on motherboards, sound cards, and laptops as well?
  • lever_age - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    Glad to see this. My suggestions are as follows:

    1. Include an output impedance measurement. If you're using these as decent-quality audio players with headphones, this is one of the most important things to know for certain headphones, at least. Who cares what the measured frequency response with a resistor is if your source's output impedance is causing +/- 5 dB swings in response for some balanced armature IEMs?

    2. Standardize THD+N tests to a given output level for all phones (say 0.1 V or whatever else; the danger is picking something standard like 0 dBu that some phones could possibly not even reach). Don't just use whatever the max volume is, especially since that's into clipping territory for some phones. People don't scale their playback levels by how much power the electronics is capable of handling. I hope. Referencing a fixed level is more fair.

    3. Please do keep reporting which phones run into clipping (and at what load) at volume settings at max or less. Also what some nonstandard settings like Beats Mode do.

    4. Make careful distinction of THD with headphones as load and as not. If not loading with headphones-level impedance that is mostly testing the performance when hooked up to say a speaker system with a patch cable, which I don't think many people are doing these days.

    5. When reporting maximum level, standardize to point of say 1% THD (or max volume, whichever comes first). Also note if headphones are used or not. It'd be meaningless to quote maximum levels far past the point of clipping.

    6. If you have time, see if you can coax and measure some bad behavior out of the phone by using Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, LTE, etc. simultaneously, maybe some CPU/GPU load and seeing if that causes audio issues. Honestly, glitchy or cackling playback are far greater issues to audio quality than looking at 0.3 vs. 1 dB dips in frequency response at 19 kHz or something like that. Or output power levels most people don't need.

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