Your ears will love ’em: Oppo PM

pm-3-black-side-view-with-cable.jpg
The Oppo PM-3 headphones
Oppo

The Oppo PM-3 headphones knocked me for a loop: they look and feel great, sound like a more expensive pair, and they’re really comfortable to wear. As for build quality, they’re way ahead of similarly priced Beats, Bowers & Wilkins, HiFiMan, Sony or V-Moda ‘phones. The PM-3’s thick metal parts and sumptuously padded headband and earcups lend a true luxury feel to the design.

The sound is richly balanced, but detail and resolution abound. I started my PM-3 auditions with the PM-3’s plugged into the $200 FiiO X3 2nd Gen (£159 in the UK, and AU$249 in Australia) music player listening to high-res files of Wilco’s “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot,” and the PM-3’s could do no wrong. For one thing, Jeff Tweedy’s vocals sounded more realistic than you’ll hear with most headphones; there was more body and presence to the sound than I get from Bowers & Wilkins P7 or Audio-Technica ATH MSR7 headphones, for example. Those two models are awfully good, but switching over to the PM-3’s the sound filled out, so the instruments and vocals had more body and soul. Plucked electric bass on SMV’s “Thunder” album had tremendous power and weight.

Moving to a better music player, the Cowon Plenue M, all three pairs of headphones sounded clearer overall, but the PM-3 model maintained its lead, and each bass pluck was more distinct.

Related stories

This over-the-ear, closed-back design features seven-layer 55mm planar magnetic drivers, with a 26-Ohm impedance. The headphones come with a 3-meter “straight” cable, and a 1.2-meter Apple- or Android-compatible cable with a one-button control and mic. Weighing just 320 grams, or a little over two-thirds of a pound, it’s the lightest pair of planar magnetic headphones I’ve tested. They’re certainly the most comfortable. The PM-3 model is available in a black or white finish, and comes with a sturdy denim carrying case.

I briefly compared the PM-3’s with Hifiman’s open-back HE-400i planar magnetic headphones. Despite the PM-3’s being closed-back, the two sounded very close; the HE-400i sound was a little brighter, but if you need isolation from external noise, a closed-back design has a clear advantage. If you want to hear the world around you, the open-back HE-400i’s are better. One other thing, the PM-3’s play louder with a music players set to the same volume; that’s because they’re easier to drive (more sensitive) than the HE-400i’s.

To finish I also compared the PM-3 model with Oppo’s top-of-the-line PM-1 headphones, with my Schiit Lyr 2 headphone amplifier. The PM-1’s sounded bigger, more authoritative and spacious; the refinement is definitely there. That said, the PM-3 model’s sound is more immediate and present, it sounds closer.

I love the PM-3 headphones, right now they’re leading the pack, they’re my favorite for the money. That’s $399 in the US, £349 in the UK, and AU$549 in Australia.

Check Also

8 New Google Products We Expect to See This Year

Google’s device line could end up having a particularly important moment in 2023. The company usually announces new Pixel products throughout the year. Google is expected to release its first foldable phone this year, however, which would directly compete with Samsung’s proven line of Galaxy Z Fold devices. Google also introduced its own ChatGPT rival, …

Leave a Reply