Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT review
What are the Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT
The
Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT are the full package. As well as being
wireless headphones, they’re in-ear ones that also offer active noise
cancellation
You don’t often see in-ear sets with this amount of
tech. Sure enough, they offer effective noise cancellation and pretty
good wireless smarts
As is so often the case with tech-heavy
headphones, though, the sound quality doesn't match similarly priced
conventional competitors'. So, how much you do you want wireless? If the
extras really appeal, these make great commuter and exercise earphones
Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT – Design
The Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT design's actually pretty good. To look at the pictures, you might not think that, though
They
use a large but otherwise traditional traditional earpieces joined
together by a neckband that is part chunky remote, part battery. I liked
the two parts' placement as it stopped either pulling on my ears, or
running down my chest, as they often do on competing headphones
As
such, they’re great for runners or gym-goers. While they are a little
bit eye-catching, a clear ‘gadget’, they probably aren’t any more
embarrassing than the next person’s gym gear
The
Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT band is flexible and has an ever-so-slight
tension and elevated friction thanks to a slightly rubbery finish. As
such they stay almost still during exercise without feeling like they
are gripping your neck, and leave nothing to pull down from your ear
canals.
As I said at the beginning: pretty good design
All
the controls sits on the left end of this band (as worn), letting you
change the volume and switch the active noise cancellation on and off.
It uses the same QuietPoint branding as other cancelling Audio Technica
headphones, but the way any of these kind of earphones/headphones work
is similar anyway
They use microphones on the outside to monitor
ambient sound, then inject inverse waves to cancel out that sound.
That’s why more intense ANC headphones cause a weird sensation of
pressure in your ears. While they reduce noise, they actually increase
sound pressure. The effect is only very minor here, though.
For
the most part the ANC works very well. There’s a little switch on the
outside of the band that turns it on and off, and it really takes the
edge off the noise of public transport. The Audio Technica house sound
isn’t exactly a thundering wall of sound, so having good ANC is very
welcome and means the earpieces don’t need a too-invasive fit.
It
works. But it is not perfect. In certain conditions it seems to create a
distracting mid-range drone, as if a certain band isn’t touched by
QuietPoint. I remember this happening in the hubbub of a busy pub, but I
also heard it in a near-empty car park once. Go figure. It becoming
obvious is a rarity, though.
Bluetooth performance is similar, in
that it is good but not perfect. Range is perfectly fine, letting me
move about through a couple of rooms without break-ups, but there are
some less explicable glitches. It varies between phones
With the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge Plus+, each session seemed to begin with 30 seconds or so of serious glitchiness before settling down. With the Huawei Mate S Premium
I experienced just a couple of brief glitches in several hours of
listening spread over a few sessions. Clearly some Bluetooth chipsets
just get on better with others, but it is only right to let you know my
experiences (the Samsung phone worked perfect with Samsung’s Bluetooth
headphones (no surprise) so it’s not as simple as blaming either party
outright)
With
just Bluetooth and no ANC, Audio Technica says you’ll get 13 hours of
use, or eight hours with ANC plus Bluetooth. It has been a bit tricky to
reliably assess stamina out in the real work because of one little
thing: it’s devilishly easy to leave ANC switched on when you stop
listening. There's no auto-off feature. And it’s worth using most of the
time because it has, unusually, virtually no major effect on the sound.
ANC generally has a significant effect, either altering the tone or
volume level
No big effect is what you want, though, especially
as you can also use the ANC40BT when the battery dies with the included
USB-to-3.5mm cable. Most ANC sets have a little 3.5mm socket, but to
save space the Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT output audio from the charge
socket, which is smart
Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT – Sound Quality
You
have a right to expect great sound in any £150 pair of earphones, even
if they have Bluetooth wireless and noise cancellation. Do the Audio
Technica ATH-ANC40BT provide it? For the most part, although there are
some issues
Their greatest strength is something that doesn’t
instantly hit you over the head, because these are not earphones with a
focus on one part of the sound: no club-like banging bass or
ultra-intense treble. There’s more of an even balance than that
So
while the bass’s really quite excellent quality won’t strike you on
first trying them on, it is certainly there. It is fast and intricate, a
lot more disciplined and taut than the £50-70 earphones I had been
testing beforehand. In wine critic nonsense-speak you might call it
plummy
This
restrained-quantity, top-quality bass gives the Audio Technica
ATH-ANC40BT a clear signature. It’s often bass or mid-bass that ends up
clouding sound
It’s the frequencies higher up that aren’t quite
so perfect. For a £150 set they are a little prone to sibilance, and the
upper-mids have a slightly hard, synthetic edge that you wouldn’t want
to hear in a £100-plus ‘normal’ set of earphones
These effects
aren’t necessarily deal-breakers. They’re things I’ve noticed in
comparison with other earphones and headphones, not things that have
caused obvious fatigue after an hour or so of listening. But it does
mean that, aside from the bass, these might not be the
audiophile-quality earphones you were hoping for
Should I buy the Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT
With
fairly effective active noise cancellation and, when paired with the
right phone, good Bluetooth performance, the Audio Technica ATH-ANC40BT
get a lot right. It’s also handy that you can use Bluetooth/ANC
independently, go wired when the battery dies and that the sound barely
changes as cancellation is switched on and off. That’s a real rarity
There
are little shortfalls in each area that make them less than a sure-fire
hit, though. Not everyone’s going to love the look/feel of the
neckband, Bluetooth performance isn’t flawless, ANC is bettered by the
(more expensive) Bose QC20 and the mids/treble are a little hard and slightly sibilant for the price
Still,
if this is the exact combo of features you’re after, I’m not going to
deny having enjoyed using them. I’ll be on the lookout for other
potential ‘ultimate’ travel/sport earphone sets for review later this
year
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