Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic
Hear every detail of your music every time you tune in with the Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic. They offer pro audio performance and impressive sound isolation, and convenient buttons let you adjust the volume, control music and video playback and even answer or end calls on your iPhone.
Learn moreOverview
This accessory is compatible with the following:
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iPhone 3GS
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iPod touch
2nd generation -
iPod classic
120GB 160GB (2009) -
iPod nano
5th generation (video camera) -
iPod nano
4th generation (video) -
iPod shuffle
3rd generation
Most Useful Reviews
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Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic
Simply amazing!
Written by MB
Dec 18, 2008
I'm an audio engineer with 18 years experience, well trained hearing, and I know my way around an IEC 711 coupler. Among other things, I've had extensive experience with high-end in-ear headphone design. So, I feel like I can offer some objective comments about the Apple In-Ear Headphones.
Tone quality is nearly neutral - music comes through basically as it was recorded. The reproduction is brutally honest, and you will find that low bit-rates and bad recordings sound like what they are. The bass is definitely rock solid, and goes far below 20 Hz - but it is extremely tight and controlled. Those of you who expect unnaturally heavy, boomy bass may be disappointed. Mids are clean, transparent and smooth. The highs are amazingly extended, open and effortless. Audible distortion is vanishingly low, and dynamic range is excellent.
Price/performance is simply unbeatable. These phones are absolutely capable of outperforming competitive models 4x the cost. That Apple is able to provide true 2-way dual balanced-armature phones, with this level of audio performance, at this price point, boggles the mind.
Since these are in-ear phones, they must be inserted correctly to work. ANY air leak will kill bass performance and shift tone quality harshly toward the midrange. You must use the right eartips, your ear canals have to be reasonably close to a round shape, and clean (ie no tufts of hair, dried skin or earwax, etc.... ewwww, sorry) for a good, air-tight seal. If they are inserted too deep, or not deep enough, response will change and sound quality will suffer.
Also because they are in-ear phones, some sound can be conducted through the cable and may become audible. Conductive sounds your body makes will be louder as well - chewing, breathing, swallowing and so forth are sometimes audible. For most people this is not a serious issue. Hearing aids and earplugs do this too.
Yes, they're not compatible with everything, and that is a valid issue for those who would like to use their 3G iPhone with them. This is a known issue, and Apple details what products are fully compatible with these headphones. It could be that a software update will solve this problem - and even if it doesn't, you knew about it..... Quit griping.
A stunning achievement, Apple. I am very impressed.
…More6217 of 6809 people found this useful
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Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic
Better than Sonys
Written by JM from GREENVILLE
Dec 24, 2008
I've been using a set of Sony MDR EX70LPs for about 5 years. Great product, once you get used to having a speaker jammed in your ear. I usually wound up fiddling with them a bit after 30 minutes of so, they seem to slightly irritate my ear.But the bass is so much better than conventional buds or phones (I've tried countless Sony, Yamaha, every brand under the sun). A few months ago, I wondered if Sony had improved the product any and bought a set of MDR-EX81LPs. Slightly better phones, but more awkward to wear.
So when I heard I was getting an iPod touch for Christmas, I figured I would order a set of these and give them a shot. Got the phones two days before Christmas, decided to try them out on my 5g iPod. Plugged them in and turned on iTunes, awaiting sonic nirvana.
But...no bass. None, zip, zilch, nada.
OK, so, something isn't right. The medium rubber pieces seem a little loose, maybe I need to try the other ones. I open the capsule with the others...but they look smaller. Then I notice the label on the capsule, and pull open the other side, marked L, swap in the bigger rubber pieces, pop the phones back in, and...
Oooooooooooh yeeeeeeaaaaaaah. That's what I was looking for. Some hip hop. Yep, plenty of bass. Norah Jones - perfect female vocals. Guns'n'Roses - guitar works.
As is the case with all in-ears I've tried, they telegraph a lot of noise from wire movement, but that's controllable somewhat depending on how you wear them. And as another review pointed out, wearing them while eating will sound horrible.
These are the best-sounding headphones I have ever owned. I haven't compared them to the Etymotic Research, but they are much more comfortable than either of the Sonys - I've had them in for an hour and haven't touched them.
If you try these and can't stand in-ears, or if you have odd-sized or shaped ears, that's a shame. If you try them and think they don't have any bass, you need to try the larger pads - when they seal to your ear, these things go as low as any speaker I have ever heard, and I can't even begin to turn my iPod up all the way (though admittedly I don't have any hearing damage, as some other 35-year-olds do). …More2267 of 2752 people found this useful
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Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic
Sweet music to my ears...
Written by SG from Lakewood
Dec 13, 2008
These are best earphones I've ever had. I've had sonys, the stock iPod buds, the previous generation of apple in-ear buds, and some others and by far these are purely AWESOME.
On the first listen, I thought they were just OK, but after a while I truly got to experience all the different sounds and how well these earphones produced them. Bass is amazing (although, it seemed to need just a bit more boom - but that might just be me :) Treble is great too. These do seriously sound like several-hundred-dollar earbuds. Also, these are the MOST COMFORTABLE earphones ever. I almost don't even notice them in my ears - they are that amazing - while they still provide a firm fit so movement doesn't dislodge them.
Packaging is beautiful, the additional silicone tips are a huge plus, and the added mesh caps are a nice touch.
My only issue is the lack of volume control for iPhone. Hopefully that'll come at some point?
…More1900 of 2322 people found this useful
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Most Recent Reviews
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Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic
Great sound, with some build quality issues
Written by PK from Calgary
Dec 22, 2009
I'm speaking from the experience of using these headphones daily for 1 year (bought them Dec '08, writing this review in Dec '09).
The sound is fantastic, I listen to two very different acoustically structured genres of music (heavy metal, trance) and these headphones do a great job of doing justice to the music. Bass is strong and treble is clear, the sound quality hasn't deteriorated at all. The ear pieces are very comfortable and haven't gotten worn out or damaged at all.
However there are 2 pieces of these headphones that suffer from poor build quality. The rubber cover around the headphone jack has ripped where it meets the cable. This happens on all Apple headphones I've owned. And secondly, the glue holding the little grey rubber tubes to the bottom of the headphones where it meets the wire is very weak causing them to slip off and ride up and down the wire, using crazy glue to fix it evntually causes the grey rubber to tear. You're better off just ripping these off. …More1 of 1 people found this useful
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Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic
Not that great
Written by AC from San Francisco
Dec 22, 2009
The bass is not very good with these unless they are jammed into your earholes and unfortunately the various sized silicon buds don't fit well into mine. I was better off with the basic apple ear buds. …More
1 of 2 people found this useful
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Apple In-Ear Headphones with Remote and Mic
Pricey
Written by CK from Beresford
Dec 21, 2009
Okay, I'm sure the sound quality is great and they fit well and all, but they are EXTREMELY expensive! I mean, an 2GB iPod shuffe is cheaper than this! And a 4GB is the same price. Your money is certainly better spent elsewhere. …More
1 of 2 people found this useful
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Questions & Answers
Most Interesting
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is this earphone compatible with iphone 3g?
- Asked by SL from Sunderland
- Oct 2, 2009
Best Answer
Only the volume control is not. Cheers.
- Answered by SC from CARNEGIE
- Oct 3, 2009
- 48 of 52 people found this useful
- 2 more answers
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Does anyone know where I can get spare rubber buds, I know you get three pairs with it, but I've lost mine and currently can't use the earphones?
- Asked by DR from Hornchurch
- Oct 9, 2009
Best Answer
You can call apple tech support, and they can send you a DIY Kit with earbud replacements.
- Answered by LP from Charlottetown
- Oct 11, 2009
- 23 of 26 people found this useful
- 2 more answers
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Are you able to stop/pause songs and use the mic for handsfree on the 3G iPhone?
- Asked by CP from Calgary
- Oct 7, 2009
Best Answer
Yes you can, when a call comes in it will automatically pause your music and allow you to press the middle grey button on the remote to answer the call, this will then activate the mic and allow you to take the call, once the call has ended, or you disconnect from the call your music will start playing where it left off, It's great! You can also pause your music at anytime by pressing the middle grey button on the remote. Hope this helped :) …More
- Answered by GS from Alvaston
- Oct 7, 2009
- 22 of 22 people found this useful
- 5 more answers
Most Recent
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I'm getting the new Shuffle for my father but since he has hearing aids, he won't want these in-ear headphones. Is there another option?
- Asked by MW from Hopkins
- Dec 21, 2009
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are the headphones compatible with the 5th generation of iPod?
- Asked by RC from Millbrae
- Dec 21, 2009
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Has anyone compared quality and sound isolation to the Etymotic hf5?
- Asked by LM from Halifax
- Dec 20, 2009
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does the volume and skip buttons work on ipod nano 4?
- Asked by YX from hangzhou
- Dec 19, 2009
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what is the difference between stock supplied shuffle earphones and in-ear mic ear phones?
- Asked by CB
- Dec 18, 2009
