Zerstorer_GOhren

500+ Head-Fier
7HZ AURORA: The Technical Adept Shimmering One
Pros: ● Durable composite shell structure.
● Regardless of its size, it fits well to my medium size ears due its smooth contours thus it provides better passive noise isolation.
● That metal pattern banding look on its faceplate looks pretty gorgeous.
● Tri-brid driver set-up has excellent cohesive performance.
● Like all midranger sets, This set has a lot of accessories.
● Premium-quality stock cable with modularity feature.
● Its new stock ear tips have the potential to be one of the best in the market.
● A well-balanced mild U to U-shaped tuning
● Reverberating and vivacious bass response.
● Fairly textured, dense and energetic midrange presentation.
● Perhaps it has some vocal versatility on it, excellent on tracking some tenors, countertenors, mezzo-sopranos and sopranos.
● Good for instruments with some metallic timbre like brasses and some woodwinds.
● Bright, airy and sparkling treble response.
● One of the most resolving sets that I've heard in the midrange segment.
● Outstanding overall technical capabilities, from sound/speaker stage up to the layering and separation.
Cons: ● Definitely not a neutral sounding one due to its coloured tuning.
● Instances of slight sibilance especially on sibilant-laden tracks.
● While it is not to be considered as strident, the energetic and tinny sound might be bothersome to some treble sensitive folk.
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7Hertz or 7Hz is one of the audio companies that has its paradigm shift moments in the audio landscape in 2021. If you are a long timer in the audio enthusiast scene, who will ever forget their first product, the 7Hz Timeless which was considered as the gamechanger of the planar IEM market and a dual dynamic driver basshead-favoured set, the LEGATO.

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To be honest, I only have a few product reviews on 7Hz items that I've published so far and this content will be a third one. This product that will be featured here is their latest midrange product and compared to other 7Hz products that I've reviewed in the past, this one is quite different.

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This is 7Hz AURORA, their latest product that will cater the midrange segment and it is a hybrid driver set-up IEM earphone. This set has three types of drivers that were implemented inside and these are dynamic driver, new generation micro planar driver and balanced armature driver. Each type of driver was assigned to a specific part of audio frequency as it has its own distinctive electro-mechanical performance. The 12mm dynamic driver has a composite material on its diaphragm as its delivers a clear, deep and rich bass quality while the customised dual balanced armatures (probably a newer generation of Bellsings) is capable to deliver a crisp, clear and brimming sound on the midrange frequency and then the new generation micro-planar driver (I have some intuition that this might a flat panel driver but need some more confirmation about this particular driver) will add more clarity, well-detailed on its resolution and copious amount of brilliance air. It seems that all these drivers were connected into three-way crossover circuitry for smoother, coherent, seamlessly flat and less distortion on its frequency response curve.

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In regards to comfortability, despite its large frame for an IEM, the AURORA can give a very comfortable wear and comfort to my lugholes that I was able to wear it on long listening sessions. Passive noise isolation is quite excellent on this one as it really seals off some external noises from the outside.

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The drivers and other components were encapsulated in a composite shell chassis in which the cavity base is made of an opaque 3D-moulded imported resin while its faceplate is a metal alloy with some titanium filament to give distinctive pattern-like banding on some steel forging process. The general dimension of the shells are on the large size just like most multi-driver hybrid sets and it has three ventholes on the top part for escaping some excess air pressure generated from its high performance dynamic driver. Regarding its interlocking mechanism for cable connection, it uses the standard 0.78mm bi-pin connector as it is the most stable and easier to detach.

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As for its stock cable, it is truly a premium grade cable which is quite thick, durable and supple that it offers a less susceptible on entanglement. This one has 4-core gold-plated monocrystalline copper wires that were shielded with PVC insulators that are twisted and braided, and it has a modularity feature where we can change its termination plugs for output versatility that most modern audio devices have. The available modular termination plugs are 3.5mm single ended and 4.4mm balanced that were angled into a L-shaped form.

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As for product packaging, the AURORA has a medium-sized rectangular box with some illustrations and information prints like basic specification and company addresses. The contents inside were well-arranged and organised as it gives a pleasant overall presentation.

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These are the following contents inside of 7Hz AURORA's packaging box:
  • Pair of 7Hz AURORA IEM transducers
  • Stock cable
  • A white-coloured pill-shaped carrying case
  • Ear tips casing
  • A pair of medium-sized balanced bore ear tips.
  • 3 pairs of narrow bore ear tips in different standard sizes.
  • 3 pairs of new generation of 7Hz high quality flexible silicone ear tips in different standard sizes.
  • User's manual
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In addition, I would like to introduce the latest 7Hz ear tips and they are made of pliable high quality silicone ear tips which gives an improvement of its brilliance extension, dynamic range and an increase of soundstage perception. It really offers me a very comfy feeling while having an excellent grip into my ears due to its tacky surface.

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The 7HZ AURORA is actually easy to drive as it will amplify a good amount of audible volume level even from a device with decently normal gain output. But powering up on this set on the sources with a better amplitude level will sound even more fuller and vivid. I would like to share about this IEM on pairing and synergy on some sources, if I paired it to a more warmish-neutral or balance-neutral sources with some specified audio ICs like AKMs and Cirrus Logics, there are some noticeable smoothness and subduing those “digital glares”.

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As for its tonality, The AURORA has a mild U to U-shaped (depends on the ear tips) sound profile with somewhat balanced presentation in all parts of the frequency range.

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(Graph measurement was provided by @baskingshark , credits to his effort)


LOWS/BASS:

The bass response of this set is reverberating, precise, tactual and clean. It shows the quality of its bass region that makes this set's defining tuning. While it appears that it focuses more on subbass presence, it still balanced out with the ample texture on its mid-bass to give some semblance of authority and slam.

The deep, vibrant subbass presence can be perceived clearly on how it responds from subbass-focused instruments like low tone bass guitars, synthesisers, octobasses and drum machines. An adequate mid-bass texture somehow gives a sufficient note weight on instruments like bass kick drums, bass guitars, double basses, bass trumpets and male vocals like bass and bass-baritones. Bass kick drums have resonant, rumbly and sustaining sound on every stroke that even it can cope up with the fast double bass kicks on extreme metal tracks, bass guitars and double bass have rasping, sombre and resonant as both sets can be an accompaniment with music ensembles, the former instrument is for modern genres like rock, jazz and pop while the latter is for classical, operas and orchestras. Bass trumpets have metallic and a less fuller sound as it should have on its usual register, and as on male vocals, while it doesn’t have that depth and dark tone to give that guttural and booming voice but at least it has an ample weight with little vibrato to give some dense and wool-like sound on bass and bass-baritone vocals.


MIDRANGE:

As on how it renders its midrange presentation, it is quite discernible on how it is slightly a bit notch on the overall frequency range of this set but it has a well-balanced texture on its note weight to give some heft and density on instruments and vocals with an energetic and shimmery sound on it to add more clarity and openness on high-pitched female vocals, strings and some woodwinds.

On male vocals, baritones have a smooth, velvety and lushness on their vocals which are excellent on both light and lyric types of baritone voice although while other types of baritones like Kavalier baritone, Verdi baritone, dramatic and noble baritones sounds somehow natural but they are a bit too mellow, milder and less powerful as these voices needs more warm and note density. Tenors vocals are excellent on this one as all tenor voice types either it is leggero, lyric, spinto, dramatic and heldentenor have a spiciness, brassy, dazzling and tinny sound on them while countertenors have a graceful, tender and softness on their vocals albeit a tad brighter to this set's energetic tuning nature.

As on female vocals, while contraltos have this smoky and full voice on this set, I wish that they have more weight and depth on them as it is a typical timbre characteristic on this particular vocal type. Mezzo-sopranos have those intense and bold sounds while maintaining a velvety and tender vocals as they convey a melodic and soothing quality. Soprano vocals are probably the AURORA's most strongest forte on how it depicts the quality of this particular vocal type whether it is coloratura, lyric, soubrette or dramatic ones as they sound crystalline, silvery and shimmering.

On how the instrument sounds on this set, it appears that they all sound organic and detailed as it is able to capture some of its tonal colouration but some added brightness. Strings instruments like guitars, violins and cellos, there's a crisp, presence and bright sound on every plucking on the notation strings of guitars, while the violins have a sparkling and vibrant sound on every motion on its bowstring and a clear, lively and incisive sound on cellos. When it comes to woodwinds, flutes have bright, rich and silvery sound, have intense and brilliant sound, clarinets have bright and expressive sounds that evokes some pastoral theme on some orchestral tracks and saxophones have lively and reedy sound on them. As for brass instruments, trumpets have brilliant and vivid sound while trombones have penetrating and metallic sound, horns have a resounding, brilliant and metallic sound, and tubas have resonant and rumbling sound on them. Then on percussives, snare drums have clear, precise and sharp sound on every stroke, tom-toms have resonant and reverberating sound albeit it somehow lack of warmth, field or tenor drums have majestic, sonorous and reverberating sound on them, plate bells have some metallic and rich of overtones on them and kettledrums have dry, rumbling and substantial sound. Pianos have a well-balanced sound as it has a bright and even tone on its characteristic.


HIGHS/TREBLE:

Probably, one of the highlights of the AURORA's tuning to showcase its treble response. It is definitely on a brighter side of tuning but not that too intense or glaring that might ruin the overall balanced sound of this set. It has some emphasis on the upper-mids up to the presence part of the treble region to give a definition, detail and clarity on vocals and instrumental attacks. Despite the mild boost on those particular regions, I don't hear any stridency and the sibilance is kept under control although in some sibilant-laden tracks, I've encountered some occasional hissing sound. This type of tuning should take caution by some treble-sensitive folks out there due to its energetic and intense tuning of this set.

On the brilliance part of the treble, there's a copious amount of harmonics and well-defined sparkle and excellent treble air extension. On how it affects the tonal colour on each corresponding musical instrument, cymbals have bright, metallic and brilliant sound while hi-hats have a shortened buzz and sizzling sound. Glockenspiels on either mallet-types or keyboard variant, have this shimmering and brilliant sound on them and celestas have bright and lustrous sound that gives those “heavenly” and royal ball-like atmospheres.


SOUNDSTAGE, IMAGING AND OTHER TECHNICALITIES:

As I ascertain regarding this set in terms of technical facets, this is truly its strongest asset on why this set is such a remarkable performer in these aspects. We could clearly perceive its vast, spacious sound field with wide lateral span, excellent height reach and good depth distance from front to rear.

It does project an atmospheric and three dimensional stereo presentation where I can accurately locate the placement of instruments and singer(s) in a well-layered soundscape with excellent separation on each element.

The cohesiveness of its tri-brid drivers works pretty well on how these drivers work in unison with a homogeneity performance. Dynamic driver has fast transient to deliver a pristine bass response while the balanced armatures gives a smooth yet detailed output that works in support with added airy ambience from the micro planar.

Resolution capability wise, both macro-dynamics and micro-dynamics are commendable on this set as it shows a solid note texture while having a sharp definition of micro-detail retrieval on how it extracts the nuances of notation attacks, vocals ends and room effects like reverberations.


PEER COMPARISONS:

AFUL PERFORMER 8

  • AFUL PERFORMER 8 has a hybrid driver set-up consisting of a single dynamic driver and seven (7) balanced armature drivers. Unlike the Aurora, it doesn't have micro planar driver and its shell chassis is entirely made of medical-grade resin shell with a sandstone-like colour theme and also.it has a smaller size compared to the AURORA which makes it more suitable to all ear type sizes. While it also has quite well-accessories like the AURORA and also has a premium quality cable but it doesn't have a modular termination plug feature.
  • As for tonality, it has a mild U-shaped sound profile but in some way it has an almost balanced-neutral type of sound that I'm quite adhered to. Compared to the AURORA, it has a bit tighter bass response, a less colouration on timbre and more natural sounding vocals and instruments on its midrange presentation and smoother and even treble response albeit it has less airy extension.
  • On technicalities, the PERFORMER 8 has a bit narrower and less spacious sound/speaker stage if it is compared to the AURORA. But the rest of most technical performance, it has a similar capabilities collated with the compared set.

KIWI EARS QUINTET
  • This is probably the closest one that I currently have in my collection of multi-hybrid driver set-up and I can definitely compare it with the AURORA. QUINTET also has a micro planar driver aside from dynamic drivers, piezo-electric bone conduction driver and balanced armature drivers that were arrayed inside. It also has a composite shell chassis like the AURORA although it is more compact and its faceplate is quite more minimalist. Knowing KIWIEARS, they are a bit meagre in terms of accessories and its stock cable seems decent but doesn't have a modular feature.
  • This set has a mild U-shaped sound signature and it seems it has less coloured sounding compared to the AURORA. It has more subbass-focus bass response as it has more rumble with a decently textured midbass just to give enough slam, a linear and more neutral midrange presentation with a hint of transparency and a bright treble with good sparkle and air on it.
  • On the facets of its technical capabilities, while it has a pretty wide sound/speaker stage size, my main concern was its depth as it is quite lacking in my opinion. But at least it has a remarkable stereo imaging presentation, layering, separation and coherency. It seems that it has a sharp micro-detail definition but its macro-dynamics is less solid.

To sum up my assessment about this product, for the past few days, I'm quite impressed with the overall performance of the 7Hz AURORA as it gives me that engaging factor to enjoy its coloured tuning. The most thing that I truly amazes me was it's overall technical performance as if it reaches some of the best midrangers and probably even some TOTLs that I've tested so far, spacious sound/speaker stage, atmospheric stereo presentation, layering or whatever technicalities we know to determine its performance of playback.

While there are some improvements in terms of tonality and its timbre as there are some noticeable colourations like a bit too energetic that causes some tinny and brazen sound characteristics to some vocals and instruments as it might be an issue to some treble-sensitive folk. But with its balanced tuning with good bass quality, transparent, vivid and spacious vocal presentation on the midrange and a detailed, sparkly airy treble response, these particular tonal aspects are enough to outweigh those concern unless if you want a neutral head, treble-sensitive or wants a more colouration on its particular sound profile.


7Hz AURORA is now available at LINSOUL, if you are interested in this product, there's a provided unaffiliated link below.


★★7HZ AURORA - LINSOUL★★


For more 7Hz product review, check out the following items that were outlined with links.

■ 7HZ LEGATO

■ 7HZ ZERO II

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SPECIFICATION:

MODEL: 7HZ AURORA
IMPEDANCE: 30Ω
SENSITIVITY: 105dB
FREQUENCY RESPONSE: 5Hz – 40KHz
CABLE LENGTH: 1.2m
PIN TYPE: 2-PIN TYPE CONNECTOR
PLUG TYPE: MODULAR 4.4mm, 3.5mm
DRIVER UNIT(S): (1) DYNAMIC DRIVER + (2) BALANCED ARMATURE + (1) MICRO PLANAR.


TRACKS TESTED: ( * = 16-bit FLAC, ** = 24-bit FLAC, *'* = MQA, '*' = DSD, *'= .WAV)

Alison Krauss -When You Say Nothing At All *
Jade Wiedlin - Blue Kiss**
Led Zeppelin - When The Levee Breaks **
Mountain - Mississippi Queen *
Queen - Killer Queen **
Guns N' Roses - Patience *'*
Eric Clapton - Tears in Heaven '*'
Sergio Mendes- Never Gonna Let You Go '*'
Pearl Jam - Daughter **
Roselia - Hidamari Rhodonite *
Assassin - Fight (To Stop The Tyranny)*
Celtic Frost- Visual Aggression *
New Order - Blue Monday *
The Corrs- What Can I do (unplugged version) *
Jimi Hendrix Experience - Voodoo Child *
The Madness- Buggy Trousers *
Metallica - Motorbreath **
Mariah Carey- Always Be My Baby *
Destiny's Child - Say My Name *
Malice Mizer- Au Revoir *
Mozart - Lacrimosa *
New York Philharmonic Orchestra - Dvorak- Symphony 9 " From the New World." *
Eva Cassidy - Fields of Gold (Sting cover)*
Michael Jackson - Give In To Me *
Exciter - Violence and Force *
Diana Krall - Stop This World **
Debbie Gibson - Foolish Beat *'*
The Sisters of Mercy – Lucretia My Reflection**
Suzanne Vega – Luka **
Lauren Christy – Steep *
Ottoman Mehter - Hucum Marsi *
Diana Damrau - Mozart: Die Zauberflöte*
Type O Negative - Black No.1 *
Felix Ayo - Vivaldi: Presto **
Three Tenors - Nessum Dorma *
Mercyful Fate - Witches' Dance *

P.S.

I am not affiliated to 7Hz  nor receive monetary incentives and financial gains as they provide me a review unit for an exchange of factual and sincere feedback from yours truly.

Once again, I would like to send my gratitude to MS. KAREENA TANG of LINSOUL for providing this review unit. I truly appreciate her generosity and trust towards me and other reviewers.

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ICYGENIUS

New Head-Fier
7HZ AURORA review of tribrid iem by ICYGENIUS 🎧
Pros: Beautiful appearance of the headphones and an excellent set of accessories included
Very energetic and dynamic sound delivery
Literally detailed and analytical tribrid monster
The sound stage is wide with excellent immersion
Powerful and textured bass with good saturation
The mid bass has a dedicated punch and the kick has a good attack
Mid frequencies are very driving with rich resolution
The upper mids are emphasized and give a more exciting highlight to the drums and vocals
High frequencies are detailed and very refined
Cons: The front panel collects fingerprints, you will have to wipe it
Introduction!
Hello friends!
Today in our review we will look at amazing tribrid headphones from the 7hz company worth $400!
They arrive in a very nicely designed medium-sized box that contains the company logo, an image of the headphones themselves and the name of this model Aurora.
And at the back are the technical specifications, and the sound is controlled by a 12mm dynamic driver responsible for reproducing low frequencies, and here we were also supplied with two custom armature drivers for mid-frequencies, and all this is complemented by a planar micro driver with a diameter of 6 mm, responsible for reproducing high frequencies, and the sensitivity is 105 decibel and they got 30 ohm impedance.

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Let's take a look at what's included!
- Excellent set of ear tips in a transparent case
- Good branded case for storing headphones
- Excellent heavy copper cable with 2 pin connectors and a modular system of replaceable plugs here we have both 3.5 and balanced 4.4 jacks.
- Manual for use

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And this is what the 7hz Aurora headphones look like, made of darkened medical resin, and they have an extremely interesting and rare front panel design that shimmers very beautifully in the light.
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They received a standard 2-pin connector and next to it they gave us three compensation holes back.
And at the bottom there is a large inscription AURORA and channel markings.
The sound guide here is quite short but has a clear edge for better fixation of the ear pads and a gold insert.
And despite the rather large body of this model, they fit perfectly in the ears, even with the included ear tips, or with any other type of Divinus and Tangzu Sancai, the fit here is quite deep and everything is in perfect order with sound insulation.

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How do these headphones sound?
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And now, friends, we have come to the most important part of the review, namely the analysis of the sound of the 7hz Aurora tribrid headphones, and here everything is very familiar to me from the point of view of the approach to tuning, since there is a powerful and accurate low-frequency boost by as much as 10 decibels, with a neat transition from the midbass region to the midrange frequencies right up to that very familiar gain in the upper midrange region, and the high frequencies here have excellent extension.

Low Frequencies:
The low frequencies here are presented as super massive with deep sub-bass, excellent transparency and simply a gorgeously highlighted attack, the bass here does not sound relaxed or smeared and we have a very clear and highlighted kick and a clear punch in the mid-bass, which should especially please bassheads , since recently there have been few such bassier headphones in my reviews, and now the 7Hz Aurora just allows us to remember that same rolling and percussive bass, and for such a voluminous and pumped-up low end, respect from me.
Mid Frequencies:
But at mid frequencies it’s even more interesting, they are presented as very energetic with excellent weight and drive in the guitars, truly gorgeous airiness and excellent separation of images, and the presentation here does not feel dry or monitory at all, but on the contrary, it is a little warm, with a slight emphasis on upper mid to make the drums and vocals sound more prominent and exciting and I know that many of you like this less neutral and relaxed approach to tuning, and I can understand you perfectly, especially in comparison with the more neutral Tangzu Nezha headphones that play much more relaxed with less emphasis on the upper mids and such powerful drive and energy especially in the heavy genres of rock or metal, they definitely won’t give you anything for that, here’s an Фurora please.
The vocals here have excellent resolution without any hint of an armature timbre or its residual overtones, there is also excellent transparency of the voice and its image is perceived to be pushed a little forward along with the drum part, and this gives in many compositions a very pleasant immersion effect and more. enveloping deep stage design, and the drum part here with very confident emphasized transient processes simply perfectly complements this whole large-scale stereo panorama picture.

High Frequencies:
But at high frequencies here everything is exactly as I like, there is killer technology and simply insane analytics due to which these headphones literally disassemble heavy instrumental genres into separate parts and layers, and I note that all this is done extremely tactfully through the use of a planar driver, but Friends, agree that what is equally important is the detail in this area , and personally, I like it so that all the percussion cymbals sound very detailed in the overtones and have tails from reverberations that are not hidden anywhere, and various micro details and nuances, I think they should definitely be clearly audible and distinguishable, especially if we are already talking about these are top-end headphones in this price category, and they definitely work out this range as it should , and the excellent expansion of this area has definitely borne fruit here, which cannot but please me because of this, with all the trails and residual after-sounds, there is complete order here, even if the presentation here is not as neutral as in Nezha, but the resolution and increased detail and transparency here are simply mine respect, and of course I am glad that there is no hint of a fake resolution, and everything here sounds completely harmonious and correct, and at the same time, the most important thing is that only positive emotions remain after prolonged listening.
My conclusion on this headphones:
7hz Aurora are truly unique headphones due to the use of different types of emitters with extremely interesting settings and, most importantly, the output has a very driving, super emotional and bassy presentation, which should satisfy your taste. If you are tired of neutral and imposing headphones, then this is definitely your choice.
Aliexpress DD-Audio Store:https://aliexpress.ru/item/1005006833190177.html
Linsoul:https://www.linsoul.com/products/7hz-aurora
I will be glad if you subscribe to my YouTube channel and watch this full review on 7HZ AURORA!
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audiophilius
Wow that price so big :sweat_smile: but this tuning and design looks interesting

d m41n man

100+ Head-Fier
7hz Aurora : Serenading without the Shout
Pros: • Balanced sound signature with a bit upper mids boost, really sings with female vocals
• Pianos and guitars strums/plucks are a treat
• Lightweight and comfy despite the somewhat larger-than-average shells
• Nice fit and with good sets of eartips
• Good quality modular cable (3.5mm SE and 4.4mm BAL)
• Best of all, very resolving and impressive technicalities for the price
Cons: • Weirdly enough, a bit average to just good with male vocals
• Borderline sharp or peaky in the lower treble with some tracks
• Planar or off-natural timbre especially noticeable in busy tracks
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Introduction
7hz have been making strides with their low-key yet very competitive releases so far. As a fan of the original Timeless all the while still keeping it in my collection, they have established their name as synonymous to budget-mid tier recommendations akin to the Timeless in the planar space to the Zero & Zero 2 in the budget-tier. The Sonus and the Dioko have their fans while the Legato has its niche basshead fans. I have to say I admire their release-window pacing and their attitude towards not fully launching the Timeless II without being confident of it which should be a pattern some chi-fi companies should take a note of, instead of churning out half-baked efforts. Now with the Aurora standing as their flafship to date and some good positive feedback from the recent Canjam SG behind it, the Aurora seems poised to be another success under 7hz's belt. Let's take a look into this nice-looking set shall we.
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Packaging and Inclusions
The Aurora comes in a slide-out box with an attractive slipcover showing the product namesake without relying on any waifu. Upon sliding and taking out the inner box, you are then welcomed by a nice-looking faux white leather flip-top case which contains the IEMs along with 6 pairs of eartips + case holder (3 pairs similar to Acoustune AET07 and 3 pairs of their new first-party produced tips similar to S&S) . You are also then graced by the nice-feeling, no tangle premium cable with 3.5mm SE and 4.4mm BAL modular termination plugs. I have to say that the stock cable itself felt really nice and premiumly hefty. Just the exact nice set of accessories to fit your needs with satisfying quality.

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Build
The 7hz Aurora out-of-the-box is a beautiful looking set, with shifting colors of the somewhat Damascus finish hoghlighting the faceplate. The shell itself is a dark translucent one that does not feel cheap or would crack soon but it is very lightweight that makes you wonder how were they able to jam a tribrid configuration of a 12mm DD and a 6mm planar along with dual BAs onto this setup.

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Sound and Comparisons
The 7hz Aurora will impress you and outright give you some 'wow' moments upon pushing that play button that will immediately justify the price you pay for it. Its sound signature is of a balanced signature with somewhat of a upper-mids boost that makes it vocal-foward in a number of tracks and genres especially with jpop, female vocals, and mainstream. Ariana Grande, milet, and LiSA are definitely singing on these sets. What definitely complements is set is its execution of acoustic tracks and instrumentals. Pianos are lovely with the Aurora. Those key hit reverbs are really felt, Steinway & Sons would be proud 😁👌 Guitar plucks and strums sound alive and energetic. Best of all, the overall implementation is very detailed and airy. The Aurora is very resolving, jamming a lot of information at you upon playback yet imaging is ponpoint. Hence, it is somewhat its own disadvantage as others may find it fatiguing and even borderline bright in the upper mids going to lower treble. Playback of genres such as heavy metal, rock, and EDM is ranging from ok to quite busy as it does have a bit of trouble handling those with finesse because of the mix of planar timbre and busy resolution. Bass is punchy but may not have enough subbass to satisfy those who love the rumble, I wouldn't say they're deficient though. Just more than enough. On a similar note, orchestrals, concertos, and classicals also shine on this set. Microdetails pop out and are apparent and movie soundtracks are a delight to listen to. Male vocals and jazz though are a mixed bag and kind of a double-edged sword with these, some remarkably good and some are a bit dull and rough, weirdly putting some male vocals in the back despite being vocal-forward with the majority. An immediate comparison and reminder upon listening to these would be the AFUL Performer8, both being very detailed with copious amounts of resolution while playback of your music in a delicate balance. The Performer8 though is more neutral in tonality and soinds more cohesive compared to Aurora's sometimes off-put timbre but I would say the bass quantity and quality is just the right proportion for sets priced at this level while both execute treble in a very airy and extended manner. Staging is also very well-executed with width and depth going to the Aurora even if vocals do tend to be in the front, other elements are well distributed across the stage.

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Conclusion
7Hz has a winner here with the Aurora, being a good balanced set that works really well with a lot of genres while being the utmost delight with female vocals, pianos, and acoustic guitars. I do recommend an actual listen with these as they could be a tilt sharp or shouty for your music preferences and if the sometimes unnatural timbre may put you off but if not, it's on the other extreme end towards enjoyment as it is very proficient with its strengths. It's also a fresh set thay set itself as a standout among the repetitive chi-fi tuning and Harman implementations. Very nicely done 7hz and if you do decide to launch the Timeless II properly, I do hope that it's going for something revolutionary worthy of a sequel but plays to its strengths like this.

Sidenotes:
IEM set has been listened via the Sony ZX-707, AK Kann Alpha, and Cayin RU7 separately using the stock eartips over the course of multiple genres across FLACs (16bit&24bit) and streaming (Tidal). The 7hz Aurora is available in Linsoul for $399 -

https://www.linsoul.com/products/7hz-aurora

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baskingshark

Headphoneus Supremus
Pros: Generously accessorized, with modular cable to boot
Solid build
Decent comfort despite larger shells
Above average isolation
Moderately easy to drive
Balanced U-shaped tonality
Very clean sonics
Textured, fast and tight bass
Transparent midrange
Good sparkle in treble
Excellent technicalities - imaging, soundstage and micro-detailing are a highlight
Cons: Shells are on the larger side and are prone to smudges
Metallic timbre noted in upper frequencies
Not for bassheads
DISCLAIMER

I would like to thank Linsoul for providing this review unit.

The 7Hz Aurora can be gotten here: https://www.linsoul.com/products/7hz-aurora (no affiliate links).

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SPECIFICATIONS

Driver configuration: 1 x 12 mm composite diaphragm dynamic driver + 2 x custom balanced armature drivers + 1 x 6 mm micro-planar driver
Frequency response: 5 Hz - 40 kHz
Impedance: 30 Ω
Sensitivity: 105 dB/V @ 1 kHz
Cable: 2-pin, 0.78 mm; single-crystal copper cable; 3.5 mm and 4.4 mm modular terminals
Tested at: $399 USD

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ACCESSORIES

Other than the IEM, these are included:

- 4 pairs of 7Hz H07 silicone eartips
- 3 pairs of long nozzle silicone eartips
- Plastic case for eartips
- Cable
- Cable terminations for 3.5 mm and 4.4 mm modules
- Carrying case

The accessory spread is generous, and definitely befitting of a MidFI IEM.


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While no foam tips are included, we have 2 variants of silicone tips. First up, we have 4 pairs of 7Hz H07 silicone tips - which are short-bore - and these present a balanced signature. Interestingly, 7Hz has debuted a long-nozzle eartip - which looks similar to the DUNU S&S types; these are also extremely balanced in sonics, but with improved soundstaging and isolation.

These S&S doppelgangers are my favourite pairing, as they furnish an expansive soundsage without overly boosting any part of the frequency response. However, they have longer nozzles and a sticky feel, and are not as soft in the ears as the other H07 silicone tips. The eartips come in their own plastic case, which is a nice touch.


Aurora 1.jpg


We have a 2-pin single-crystal copper cable provided, and this comes with distal 3.5 mm and 4.4 mm modular terminals, for pairing with single-ended and balanced sources, depending on your needs. This cable is well-braided and thick, with minimal microphonics. A chin cinch is added for practicality, and the L-shaped terminals are useful during field-use.


Aurora 3.jpg


Last but not least, we have an ovoid leatherette carrying case. The innards have webbing and soft cushioning, while the externals are tough enough to withstand compressive forces.

The rest of this review was done with the stock cable and stock long nozzle silicone tips. No aftermarket accessories were used, so as not to add any confounders to the sound.


BUILD/COMFORT

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The housings are fashioned from 3D-printed medical-grade resin. The faceplates contain titanium filaments, which are unique to each housing - thus consumers will get their own individualized IEM so to speak. The shells have a mirror-like, psychedelic and colourful tiger-striped motif, which is certainly eye-catching. They may be prone to smudging, but build quality is top-notch.

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The earpieces are quite large to house the numerous drivers. Thankfully, despite the bigger dimensions, comfort is still agreeable, due to the mere 5 g weight of each side. I had no issues wearing the Aurora for hour long sessions, with the smooth inner surfaces not poking the ears.

With the long-nozzle S&S look-alike tips installed, isolation is above average. I did not find any driver flex on my pair, which is a sign of good acoustic airflow.

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INTERNALS

The Aurora is a tribrid, boasting of the following eclectic configuration with a 3-way cross-over:
  • 1 x 12 mm composite diaphragm dynamic driver
  • 2 x custom balanced armature drivers
  • 1 x 6 mm micro-planar driver
The DD handles the bass, with the pair of BAs covering the full range. The micro-planar settles the upper treble.


DRIVABILITY

I tested the Aurora with the following sources:
- Apple dongle
- Cayin RU7
- Chord Mojo 2
- Fiio KA11 dongle
- Fiio KA17 dongle
- Khadas Tone Board -> Schiit Asgard 3 amp
- Questyle M15 DAC/AMP dongle
- Sony Walkman NW A-55 DAP (Walkman One WM1Z Plus v2 Mod)
- Sony Walkman NW A-55 DAP (Walkman One Neutral Mod)
- Sony Walkman NW WM1A DAP (Walkman One WM1Z Plus v2 Mod)
- Smartphone

This IEM is moderately easy to drive. While weaker sources may juice it, the Aurora does benefit from amplification, in terms of soundstage, dynamics and bass control.


SOUND & TECHNICALITIES

7Hz Aurora.jpg

Graph of the 7Hz Aurora via IEC711 coupler.

Tonally, the Aurora showcases a U-shaped, balanced sonic profile. This is quite genre agnostic, and should cover most consumer demands.

This is a sub-bass focused IEM. Bass extends deeply, with good rumble felt. However, it is not a bona fide basshead IEM in terms of sheer quantity. Quality-wise, the Aurora provides a textured, fast and tight bass, with not an ounce of mid-bass bleed. Even with complex bass tracks, the Aurora handles these with aplomb; case in point, for Sting's Englishman In New York, the Aurora aces the fast double bass solo in the middle of the track, where many other sets may fall apart.

The lower midrange is a tinge recessed, but this frequency band is very transparent and clean due to no bass impingement. This allows excellent layering and pinpointing of instruments and vocals on a dark background. On graphs, there appears to be a peak at the 3ish kHz region - I personally hate over-zealous upper mids - but on actual listening at moderate volumes (as per the Fletcher Munson curve), I found this region forwards without overt shoutiness, which is a tough line to balance. This slight peak actually furnishes clarity and resolution without being an ice-pick, and as we will read below, the technicalities on this IEM are top-notch.

The Aurora has good treble sparkle, but once again, this area is nicely balanced, in bestowing air but not veering to harshness. Sibilance is minimal, and the Aurora manages to get cymbal strikes and high-hat hits just right - they are present but not jarring. Of note, there's a 6/7 kHz dip in the treble which is something of a trade-secret used in TOTL tuning to decrease sibilance and splashiness without overly damping resolution.

As alluded to, the Aurora is a technicalities champ. Micro-detailing is very well portrayed. Soundstage width and height is expansive, especially when amped, and the Aurora sounds grand, yet with a very clean soundscape. Music never sounded compressed or claustrophobic. Imaging and layering is accurate, and technical junkies will be pleased to be able to locate instruments easily in the headspace.

Unlike other very technical sets, the Aurora doesn't sound sterile and maintains a decent note weight. However, where the Aurora loses some marks in my book, is in its timbral accuracy. In the upper frequencies, there is a slight hollowness to notes, especially for acoustic instruments like brasses and woodwinds. Vocals have a nasal twang too - this is a bit more prominent in female vocals.


COMPARISONS

Due to its very specialized driver configuration, I do not have any like-for-like IEMs with this setup in MidFI territory. Nevertheless, the Aurora will be compared against some other benchmark MidFI products.

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Moondrop Variations

The Variations is a Harman measurebator's gold-standard. The Variations has a prominent mid-bass scoop out, so it sounds much thinner and anemic than the Aurora in this region. The Aurora is a bit brighter in the treble.

The Variations is slightly weaker in micro-detailing and imaging, but has a bit more natural timbre and a slightly bigger soundstage and better layering.

I would consider them sidegrades at the MidFI segment. The Variations is about $120 USD more expensive though, and there are widespread reports of QC issues dogging this IEM (my Variations faceplate dropped out spontaneously without trauma, for example LOL).


Letshuoer EJ07M

The EJ07M is also U-shaped, but has a bit of a darker treble, and a thinner lower midrange.

The EJ07M has a hair better imaging, but has weaker instrument separation, soundstage and micro-detailing. In fact, the EJ07M's soundstage is notably small and claustrophobic on doing A/B comparisons back-to-back with the Aurora.

The EJ07M suffers from horrendous driver flex, which may be a deal-breaker for some.


CONCLUSIONS

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For folks wanting a balanced U-shaped pair with stellar technical prowess, the 7Hz Aurora is one to mull over. Technical chops are a highlight, in particular for imaging, soundstage and micro-detailing. Bass is very fast and clean, though not at bona fide basshead amounts, so it is a case of quality over quantity. The transparent midrange allows instruments and vocals to breathe, with good treble sparkle noted.

In terms of non-sonic tangibles, the Aurora is generously accessorized, with a modular cable for myriad source matching. Isolation is above average with relatively fuss-free drivability. While the shells are on the larger side, comfort is surprisingly decent in view of the lightweight shells.

For the ardent timbre-freaks amongst us, a negative would be a metallic timbre noted in the upper frequencies for female vocals and acoustic instruments. By and large, this is a bit more prominent for acoustic genres, and may be mitigated somewhat with tip choice or perhaps source pairing.

All things considered, the 7Hz Aurora belongs in the MidFI conversation, doing most departments well.
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theintention
theintention
Good review! Sounds like a better Phoenixcall or Dark Phoenix.

Berry108

New Head-Fier
7𝑯𝒁 𝑨𝒖𝒓𝒐𝒓𝒂 𝑹𝒆𝒗𝒊𝒆𝒘: 7𝑯𝒛’𝒔 𝒎𝒊𝒅𝒓𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒆 𝒅𝒂𝒘𝒏
Pros: Good accessories
Beautiful faceplate design
Great build quality
Clear overall sound
Ample and competent bass
Forward Vocals
Highly detailed treble
Cons: Slight metallic timbre from time to time
Sibilance in a few instances
Nozzle length and size can limit ear tip options
Scratch-prone faceplate
7𝑯𝒁 𝑨𝒖𝒓𝒐𝒓𝒂 𝑹𝒆𝒗𝒊𝒆𝒘: 7𝑯𝒛’𝒔 𝒎𝒊𝒅𝒓𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒆 𝒅𝒂𝒘𝒏

|| 𝗜𝗻𝘁𝗿𝗼𝗱𝘂𝗰𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 ||

After 7HZ’s Timeless runaway success along with their Salnotes Zero dominating the budget segment, they for the most part occupy the $20-$200 price range with some offerings in between those two like the Sonus and the Dioko.

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The Aurora will be 7HZ’s 2nd attempt in penetrating the more pricier side of the hobby with a $399 price point. This price range is often occupied by the likes of Thieaudio Hype, Moondrop’s Blessing, and along with Tanchjim’s Oxygen series.

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7HZ packed the Aurora with a 12mm DD+2BA+6mm Micro-planar magnetic driver to produce a wide frequency output. The dynamic driver is for the low frequencies, balanced armatures for the midrange, acting as an intermediary and lastly, the 6mm micro-planar magnetic driver for the the high frequencies

|| 𝗗𝗶𝘀𝗰𝗹𝗮𝗶𝗺𝗲𝗿𝘀 ||

I am in no way, shape, or form affiliated with the brands I review and do not give out preview privileges.
This set is sent in exchange for an honest review. There is no material or financial incentive for me to do this review and I guarantee no exchange has been done by both parties to influence or sway our opinions on this product.

My thoughts and opinions are of my own. My experience will entirely differ from everybody else. The contents of this review should not be considered factual as this hobby heavily leans on subjectivity. YMMV.

I don’t do rankings or tier lists as they can get outdated immediately as a reviewer can change their thoughts of a product to a certain extent. If you do want a recommendation then feel free to reach out so I can help out


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𝗜 𝗮𝗺 𝗻𝗼𝘁 𝗮𝗳𝗳𝗶𝗹𝗶𝗮𝘁𝗲𝗱 𝘁𝗼 7Hertz 𝗻𝗼𝗿 𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗲𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝗺𝗼𝗻𝗲𝘁𝗮𝗿𝘆 𝗶𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗻𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗲𝘀 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗳𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗶𝗮𝗹 𝗴𝗮𝗶𝗻𝘀 𝗮𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝘆 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝘃𝗶𝗱𝗲 𝗺𝗲 𝗮 𝗿𝗲𝘃𝗶𝗲𝘄 𝘂𝗻𝗶𝘁 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗮𝗻 𝗲𝘅𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗻𝗴𝗲 𝗼𝗳 𝗳𝗮𝗰𝘁𝘂𝗮𝗹 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗰𝗲𝗿𝗲 𝗳𝗲𝗲𝗱𝗯𝗮𝗰𝗸 𝗳𝗿𝗼𝗺 𝘆𝗼𝘂𝗿𝘀 𝘁𝗿𝘂𝗹𝘆.
𝗢𝗻𝗰𝗲 𝗮𝗴𝗮𝗶𝗻, 𝗜 𝘄𝗼𝘂𝗹𝗱 𝗹𝗶𝗸𝗲 𝘁𝗼 𝘀𝗲𝗻𝗱 𝗺𝘆 𝗴𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗶𝘁𝘂𝗱𝗲 𝘁𝗼 Linsoul Audio 𝗲𝘀𝗽𝗲𝗰𝗶𝗮𝗹𝗹𝘆 𝘁𝗼 𝗠𝗦. 𝗖𝗮𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗮 𝗖𝗵𝗲𝗻 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗽𝗿𝗼𝘃𝗶𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝘁𝗵𝗶𝘀 𝗿𝗲𝘃𝗶𝗲𝘄 𝘂𝗻𝗶𝘁. 𝗜 𝘁𝗿𝘂𝗹𝘆 𝗮𝗽𝗽𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗶𝗮𝘁𝗲 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗶𝗿 𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗲𝗿𝗼𝘀𝗶𝘁𝘆 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝘁𝗿𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝘁𝗼𝘄𝗮𝗿𝗱𝘀 𝗺𝗲 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗼𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗿 𝗿𝗲𝘃𝗶𝗲𝘄𝗲𝗿𝘀.

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| 𝗣𝗮𝗰𝗸𝗮𝗴𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗨𝗻𝗯𝗼𝘅𝗶𝗻𝗴 & 𝗔𝗰𝗰𝗲𝘀𝘀𝗼𝗿𝗶𝗲𝘀 |

The Aurora comes in a decently sized black cardboard box that will most definitely protect it during logistics. It has a render of the IEM itself on the front aligned with some text and branding. The back of the box contains an exploded overview of the internals of the Aurora along with its specifications. All the manufacturer's details are listed here as well.

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The unboxing experience is nothing new and is straightforward. Sliding off the initial illustrated cover, and removing the top cardboard will showcase the free included case on the top with an ear tip container on the bottom. Both of which are surrounded but a dense layer of foam with a cardboard top for protection. Underneath that layer is another box containing the cable, paperwork and modular plugs. The IEMs themselves are situated inside the included case and are also surrounded by dense foam that is form-fitted for the said case.

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𝗔𝗰𝗰𝗲𝘀𝘀𝗼𝗿𝗶𝗲𝘀 𝗯𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗸𝗱𝗼𝘄𝗻:

Paperwork
7HZ Aurora driver shells
4-core L-type modular gold plated SPC 2-pin cable
Both 3.5mm SE and 4.4mm BAL termination plugs
White faux-leather case
Eartip container
3 pairs of 7HZ eartips (S/M/L)
4 pairs of normal-bore tips(S/M/M/L)

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The cable, although thick and somewhat stiff, feels premium and high quality, not to mention it being modular as well, but didn’t include a 2.5mm termination plug for some reason. The ear tips especially the 7HZ branded ones are really great, it reminds me of that one DUNU S&S tips whilst the other set of eartips looks to be either clones or are actually KB Ear 07 or AET 07 but they do feel nice.

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The case included feels great as well, it can fit the Aurora with its stock cable and some accessories with no issue, although the color can be a cause for dirt or grime being more obvious in the long run.

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Overall a very solid set of accessories. It doesn’t have those quirks, accessories or features that allows the user to somewhat modify the sound like swappable nozzles, or switches but the quality of each inclusion is especially notable.

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| 𝗕𝘂𝗶𝗹𝗱 & 𝗗𝗿𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗿 𝗖𝗼𝗻𝗳𝗶𝗴𝘂𝗿𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 |

The Aurora has 2 with differing materials, one metallic faceplate, and a medical-grade black translucent resin for the rest of the body. It feels great in the hand with a nice heft to make it feel premium and substantial. The faceplate is quite a stunner as well, it has this pattern very reminiscent of damascus steel patterns with a mixture of glossy gold and blue coloring. Despite the color choice, it doesn’t stand out as much and is quite subdued still.

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Design-wise, the Aurora hinges its appeal on the faceplate. The name of the Aurora is quite apt for the type of pattern that the faceplate has which is similar to an aurora borealis. Overall, I really like the design of the Aurora, it has a nice mixture of being minimal and lowkey whilst at the same time having its own character to make it stand out against the sea of IEMs. However all this design will require a little bit of maintenance. Because of the glossy nature of the faceplate, it can be prone to hairline scratches.

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Onto the shape of the Aurora. 7HZ made the Aurora have this universal fit, with no grooves or fins but instead it has this continuous body for a more friendly fit. The 2-pin connector is located on the top of the IEM and 3 vents positioned in the rear are present. The nozzle of the Aurora is quite stubby, meaning it is quite short and thick/wide. It doesn’t protrude as much from the body but it has a depression and a lip on the nozzle to accommodate ear tips and keep them in place.
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7HZ was able to pack the Aurora with a 12mm DD+2BA+6mm Micro-planar magnetic driver setup. Each type is dedicated to executing a specific frequency range, the dynamic driver for the lows, the balanced armatures for the midrange, and the micro-planar magnetic for the high frequencies. This is definitely a stacked set of drivers, yet some sets have more niche or not-yet-mainstream drivers like bone-conduction drivers or even piezo-electrics for the same price range.


| 𝗜𝘀𝗼𝗹𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 |

Even with the universal fit, and the abundance of vents located on the rear side of the IEM, the Aurora has ample isolation to keep you immersed during playback. I find this useful during my bus trips as of late, I didn’t need to push that high of a volume just to block out noise from the outside world.


| 𝗖𝗼𝗺𝗳𝗼𝗿𝘁 |

With the straightforward fit, the Aurora fits snug and comfortable in my ears. I never found the need to remove it after some time to let my ears rest or take a breather. The fit is also snug enough that it won’t easily tangle even with drastic head movements. I would also like to note the occlusion effect on the Aurora doesn’t seem to be better or worse compared to most IEMs.

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The nozzle can be quite an issue, it is quite short and thick, making me go for an ear tip that is generally longer than the standard ones, fortunately, 7HZ included an ear tip with a longer base to help with this issue


** 𝟳𝗛𝗭 𝗦&𝗦-𝗹𝗶𝗸𝗲 𝗘𝗮𝗿𝘁𝗶𝗽𝘀 (𝗦𝗺𝗮𝗹𝗹) | 𝗞𝗶𝘄𝗶𝗘𝗮𝗿𝘀 𝗔𝗹𝗹𝗲𝗴𝗿𝗼(𝟰.𝟰) | 𝗔𝗽𝗽𝗹𝗲 𝗗𝗼𝗻𝗴𝗹𝗲 (𝗟𝗶𝗴𝗵𝘁𝗻𝗶𝗻𝗴) **


| 𝗗𝗿𝗶𝘃𝗮𝗯𝗶𝗹𝗶𝘁𝘆 |

Despite the abundance of drivers and even a presence of a planar magnetic driver, the Aurora can be surprisingly powered by my Apple Dongle and give off enough
volume, however a better source is recommended as I notice slight improvement going from that dongle to a better source.


|| 𝗦𝗼𝘂𝗻𝗱 ||

The Aurora is quite an engaging set, it has this U-shape sound that is very revealing and transparent with ample bass to give it some slam. It has the bits and bobs to be a versatile set, I can see doing well or somewhat good in most genres.

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| 𝗕𝗮𝘀𝘀 |

Lows of the Aurora is quite good. It may not wow you in terms of quantity but it will definitely win over the quality of the bass. Midbass kicks are fast and very quick decay. They feel very impactful for their amount and don't sound sloppy. Subbass is present, it goes deep for a nice sense of rumble. Again, not the most abundant, but it doesn’t sound messy and is very well kept.


| 𝗠𝗶𝗱𝘀 |

As per HBB’s observation in his video review of the Aurora, it does have this forwardness of the vocals that makes them standout. Speaking of which, vocals sound full and well bodied. Feminine vocals sound a bit more forward than their masculine counterparts but both have good air, detail and extension. Sibilance can be a concern especially for sibilant voices still but it is controlled for the most part.

Instruments sound nice and precise on the Aurora. Like the vocals, the instruments have warmth to make them sound less thin. Extension and details are also great for instruments. The upper midrange gain that can make it sound metallic from time to time.


| 𝗛𝗶𝗴𝗵𝘀 |

Treble of the Aurora is very well executed. It has a very forward treble with the cons of sounding harsh or fatiguing. It has excellent detail retrieval and is very revealing in general. The sense of air is very good as well along with extension, it never once sounded as if sounds were cut-off prematurely.

Be careful with the gain though, despite it not being harsh and fatiguing in general, pushing the gain and volume way past the recommended amount will definitely have diminishing returns.

| 𝗧𝗲𝗰𝗵𝗻𝗶𝗰𝗮𝗹𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗲𝘀 |

Another excellent performance for the Aurora. Perceived staging is quite wide and open. Imaging, layering and separation are also excellent, all sound sources have their own distinct and distinguishable position during playback and even on the most hectic segment of songs.

This is a wonderful recommendation for any analytical use case and can even be good immersive sounding set in a pinch

|| 𝗖𝗼𝗻𝗰𝗹𝘂𝘀𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀 ||

Definitely a noteworthy performer, the Aurora provides all the bells and whistles one can want on an IEM. It doesn’t defeat others on one specific use case, but it does win over in terms of versatility. This is a definitive example of a “master of none, jack of all trades” kind of IEM.

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There are still faults of course, if you are looking for a warm set that give you that relaxing, and thick sound, then the Aurora may not fit that description, but if you are looking for something that has ample and good quality bass, without compromise on the technicalities along with not being harsh, then the Aurora might fit that need.

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Maybe one of the clear faults that I could give the Aurora is the metallic timbre from time to time and maybe the nozzle being quite stubby might limit your options in terms of ear tips to use with it.

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