denverpilot
Tied Down
I'm a weirdo. I'll probably order these.
My old DC 10-13s still get the nod from time to time over my Lightspeed Sierras, and those were a serious mistake. I told the Lightspeed rep so at OSH too. They were broken literally right out of the box, and the top logo plate pops off all the time. The mic windscreen also is built to fall off. Nice folks, they have a good repair system, but I don't want to send anything for repairs, ever. Two pair of 10-13s have never been to DC, and the pair I have away nor the one I kept probably ever will.
Sure, should'a bought the Zulu perhaps. But their earcup a don't play nice with my ears and glasses bows anyway, I've noticed. I get a raw spot where the glasses rub near my temples.
I also truly hate the recordings of my audio from LiveATC with the Sierra's mic also. It sounds like crap over the air. Even on the intercom it's not a good quality mic. I have no indication the Zulu uses a different mic. Granted, most folks don't care about this at all, as long as others understand them. I play with much higher quality mics and I know what my voice should sound like. I also know it is a challenge to get my particular voice audio right in a noisy environment. The DC 10-13 mic sounds like a company that has at least one old analog audio engineer on staff somewhere who knows how to get lows out of a small microphone. And cancel wind noise. I can open the window in cruise and still not have the blast open the intercom squelch. Not so with the Sierra. The new mic may have followed Lightspeed down the suckage path. No one is ever going to do a review of the mics not graph they're spectral responses, so this one is mostly a "I hope DC continued to do it right" more than an "I know they did".
Considering they still sell more non-Aviation communications headsets than aviation ones, I suspect the chances are good of excellent mic quality.
Now, I know there's people who hate their "headclamps" and love their newer gadgetry. This headset (to me) at least looks like it mixes the desirables I want.
Over the ear for the glasses, ANR (pretty much mandatory for over the ear), and a real headband (granted the Zulu kicks the Sierra's butt in that regard). The cable looks better. The box looks decent too.
If they can take the abuse my 10-13s do, I'm probably sold. And while the Halo and Clarity Aloft style look comfy, I'd shred those little wires in a year.
Looks like they're taking reservations but I haven't seen pricing. Anyone seen that yet? (Disregard: $637 in the web store.)
If they're still made here, that's a nice secondary bonus. Looks like they are from the website.
Only other thing I would be curious about is if they can power the Bluetooth from the AA source. On the Sierra's, it's powered from the mic bias voltage meaning you kill the avionics master or want to make a phone call prior to start-up, you're screwed. I may call them and ask. It's the only question I can't find in their spec sheet, otherwise I'd just hit the order button and wait to give a PIREP.
I have another pet peeve. Why can't any of these companies with left/right volume controls build a way to simply lock them together? I get really annoyed when the mechanical sliders get out of line with each other and left/right aren't balanced. Better yet, let me unbalance them and then lock them and they move in tandem even if not equal. But I'd settle for tandem lock at the same level and either up/down button changes both sides.
Ooh. Found the BT question. The auto-shutoff switch keeps the headset actively on if it's in a Bluetooth call. That bodes well for power source not being the mic bias from the intercom.
I think I'm ordering. I'll sleep on it.
My old DC 10-13s still get the nod from time to time over my Lightspeed Sierras, and those were a serious mistake. I told the Lightspeed rep so at OSH too. They were broken literally right out of the box, and the top logo plate pops off all the time. The mic windscreen also is built to fall off. Nice folks, they have a good repair system, but I don't want to send anything for repairs, ever. Two pair of 10-13s have never been to DC, and the pair I have away nor the one I kept probably ever will.
Sure, should'a bought the Zulu perhaps. But their earcup a don't play nice with my ears and glasses bows anyway, I've noticed. I get a raw spot where the glasses rub near my temples.
I also truly hate the recordings of my audio from LiveATC with the Sierra's mic also. It sounds like crap over the air. Even on the intercom it's not a good quality mic. I have no indication the Zulu uses a different mic. Granted, most folks don't care about this at all, as long as others understand them. I play with much higher quality mics and I know what my voice should sound like. I also know it is a challenge to get my particular voice audio right in a noisy environment. The DC 10-13 mic sounds like a company that has at least one old analog audio engineer on staff somewhere who knows how to get lows out of a small microphone. And cancel wind noise. I can open the window in cruise and still not have the blast open the intercom squelch. Not so with the Sierra. The new mic may have followed Lightspeed down the suckage path. No one is ever going to do a review of the mics not graph they're spectral responses, so this one is mostly a "I hope DC continued to do it right" more than an "I know they did".
Considering they still sell more non-Aviation communications headsets than aviation ones, I suspect the chances are good of excellent mic quality.
Now, I know there's people who hate their "headclamps" and love their newer gadgetry. This headset (to me) at least looks like it mixes the desirables I want.
Over the ear for the glasses, ANR (pretty much mandatory for over the ear), and a real headband (granted the Zulu kicks the Sierra's butt in that regard). The cable looks better. The box looks decent too.
If they can take the abuse my 10-13s do, I'm probably sold. And while the Halo and Clarity Aloft style look comfy, I'd shred those little wires in a year.
Looks like they're taking reservations but I haven't seen pricing. Anyone seen that yet? (Disregard: $637 in the web store.)
If they're still made here, that's a nice secondary bonus. Looks like they are from the website.
Only other thing I would be curious about is if they can power the Bluetooth from the AA source. On the Sierra's, it's powered from the mic bias voltage meaning you kill the avionics master or want to make a phone call prior to start-up, you're screwed. I may call them and ask. It's the only question I can't find in their spec sheet, otherwise I'd just hit the order button and wait to give a PIREP.
I have another pet peeve. Why can't any of these companies with left/right volume controls build a way to simply lock them together? I get really annoyed when the mechanical sliders get out of line with each other and left/right aren't balanced. Better yet, let me unbalance them and then lock them and they move in tandem even if not equal. But I'd settle for tandem lock at the same level and either up/down button changes both sides.
Ooh. Found the BT question. The auto-shutoff switch keeps the headset actively on if it's in a Bluetooth call. That bodes well for power source not being the mic bias from the intercom.
I think I'm ordering. I'll sleep on it.