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Product Description
HeadAmp’s smallest amplifier at just 9.4 millimeters thick, the Pico Slim is an ideal companion for IEMs and low-impedance headphones. Its advanced circuitry creates a jet-black background for relaxed listening, and its special technology helps maintain perfect channel matching, even at very low listening levels Read More
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Pico Power: great versatile device. In low gain good for my IEMs, in high gain ample power for demanding headphones. Stellar sound quality for the price.
I actually leave it plugged in and mounted under my desk for a pair of planar headphones. Though it’s not the ideal case use for it, it fits my mission.
For it’s size it performs admirably, but it’s at that awkward spot where you can’t quite consider it pocket portable, and it’s too small to make a dedicated desktop unit.
I have no regrets, just the caveat to know what you want out of it.
Bought the Slim. This was primarily to use with X-Box one controller rather than the Microsoft headphone adapter. Unfortunately, the Pico Slim didn't have the gain to pull this off with Fostex TH-X00. Oddly, there was plenty of gain using the Microsoft adapter. The Slim needs adjustable (or just plain more) gain in a bad way. Also not particularly useful as an amp for Astell&Kern KANN, which I use as my main portable source. The KANN amp is no slouch, and the Slim added nothing. At this point, I have no idea just what the Slim is for. Possibly should have gotten the Power, but I've got plenty of amps at that level. I was seduced by the small size of the Slim. One day I might think of a use for it.
It's an excellent portable device, lightweight, small, long lasting batteries, it's easily recognised by Windows and OSX computers... everything that one would expect from such a product, but in what it excels is in the sound quality. It can drive a lot of different headphones, even the demanding Sennheiser HD-600 and 800, not to deafening levels, of course, but with all the detail and fullness needed to make the listening experience enjoyable. The only thing I wish it were different is that it needs a charger to refill the batteries, using another socket, not the USB one, which is used just for computer connectivity. A really small inconvenience but worth commenting.