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Reviews

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

Last updated: May 15, 2021 8:04 pm UTC
By Jeremy Horwitz
Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

Pros: High-performance earphones with three speaker drivers per earpiece, delivering impressive detail and full-bodied sound across the entire spectrum, with roughly equivalent performance to company’s higher-priced custom earphones, and superior overall low-end performance to class-leading option at lower price point. Includes very nice carrying case, fit kit, and other accessories. Most aggressive price we’ve yet seen for a triple-driver earphone; professional quality sound, rendered almost affordable.


Cons: Outstripped on comfort and sound quality by Shure’s top-of-line triple-driver earphone; larger and more conspicuous in your ears by a wide margin than many other in-canal earphones. Single available color (blue) may not be right for some potential buyers.

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

If you’ve been following the leaks on Ultimate Ears’ famous XXX (triple-X) headphones, you’ll want to read this – the first actual shots and details on the finished product, recently renamed “triple.fi” to avoid search term confusion. Promising to deliver the same top-of-line audio quality as the company’s vaunted UE-10 Pros, but in a universal ear casing that doesn’t require custom fitting, the triple.fi 10 Pro earphones use a similar triple-driver design to what was found in the $900 UE-10s (and Shure’s recent, excellent $500 E500 series earbuds), but with several tweaks. Ultimate’s take includes cords that have memory portions at their tops, for less slippage out of your ears during listening, blue bodies rather than Shure’s copper brown, and audio quality the company claims is the best available at its sub-E500 price point of $400.


Most people owe their knowledge of the phrase “triple-driver earphones” to Ultimate Ears, a premium headphone manufacturer with a reputation for catering to professional musician and celebrity clientele. The company’s most famous earphones are perhaps its least accessible – the $900 UE-10 Pro (iLounge rating: A-) places three miniature speakers in each of your ears, while the $850 UE-7 Pro does the same, minus a tiny additional circuit board found in the UE-10. So large were the drivers that Ultimate Ears sold them only inside rubberized earpieces custom-fit to your ear canals, a measurement process that promised to yield professional-quality sound and isolation from outside noise.


Early in 2006, earphone rival Shure dropped a bomb, debuting a miniaturized $500 triple-driver earphone that required no custom fitting session and promised similarly outstanding sound quality. The result, Shure’s E500PTH (iLounge rating: A), was a superlative design, widely satisfying all of iLounge’s editors despite their varied sound and comfort preferences.

Engineering enabled the new triple-driver design to fit snugly in the nook of your ear right outside the middle ear canal, providing even more enticing sound than the more expensive UE-10s.


 

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

In recent months, Ultimate Ears representatives began to hint that they were poised to respond with their own one-size-fits-all triple-driver canalphone, code-named triple-X, and over the last few weeks, the company promised a more aggressive price point than Shure’s. The finished product arrived last week with an impressive $400 sticker and new name: the triple.fi 10 Pro, a blending of the triple-driver UE-10 Pro label with that of super.fi, the company’s lower-end universal fit earphone series.

Design, Pack-Ins, and Comfort


Perhaps we shouldn’t have been surprised that triple.fi has a lot in common with the earlier super.fis: its shape is similar to last year’s super.fi 5 Pro (iLounge rating: A-) and super.fi 3 Studio models, only larger, and therefore they look and feel bigger than the more aggressively miniaturized E500s. Rather than tucking into your ears and disappearing, they jut out, with glossy blue metallic coating contrasting against Shure’s sleeker, copper-toned chassis. When we first tried the E500s, we couldn’t believe that they were so small relative to our UE-10 Pros; with the triple.fis, we couldn’t believe how much more conspicuous they are. But Ultimate Ears appears to want to make the most of this difference – it has started to treat its high-end custom-fit earphones as artistic surfaces, and there are hints that the blue metallics are only the first triple.fi color. An empty pull-down menu on the company’s web site suggests that other versions are yet to come.


 

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

From a comfort standpoint, the triple-fi 10 Pros are just like the super.fi 5 Pros: above-average, but not ideal. The slight added bulk is offset by the newer model’s softer edges and finish, which feel a little better in your ears, and as before, you get a selection of four silicone rubber tips – three single flanges in small, medium, and large, and one double-flange – plus two foam tips to guarantee solid external noise isolation in your ear canals.


 

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

Ultimate Ears’ single best fit feature is its inclusion of short memory cords below each earphone, supporting them if you want to wear them upside down in your ears, with cords draping over your ears and behind your neck.

The triple.fi 10 Pros provide two wearing options; Shure’s E500s don’t, and without the memory cord, are a little more likely to slip out of your ears when you move around than are the triple.fis. Ultimate Ears has also picked a markedly thicker cord than the one it used with the super.fi series, which we would expect would yield greater long-term durability. As before, the triple.fi 10 Pros feature 46” cables with an integrated neck length adjuster, which can be disconnected from the earphones and replaced with other options.


 

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

The company also includes a few standard items in its package – a nice rounded aluminum carrying case large enough for the earphones, a 1/4” headphone jack adapter, a level attenuator, and a cleaning tool. Through the end of 2006, Ultimate Ears will be bundling most of its triple.fis in a Limited Edition package that includes the larger UE Roadie case shown above, wrapped in exclusive Ultimate Ears artwork, and bundled with a certificate of authenticity. Roadie has enough room for the earphones and any sized iPod; foam inserts can be pulled out or put in to accommodate larger and smaller models.


Sound Quality

Our single biggest challenge in writing about the sound quality of the triple.fi 10 Pros is choosing the appropriate benchmark: Ultimate Ears has priced its first triple-driver offering at a mid-point between two of our top-rated in-canal offerings, Etymotic’s $300 ER-4P and Shure’s $500 E500PTH, leading to two obvious initial questions: does the triple.fi offer $100 worth of additional value over the ER-4P, and does it equal or better the more expensive E500 or UE-10 Pro, both of which use similar technology?


 

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

On one hand, Ultimate Ears has essentially lived up to its promise that the triple.fis rival the $900 UE-10 Pros in sound quality: other than some acknowledged tweaks to the triple.fi’s sound signature, specifically equalization boosts on both the high and low ends that collectively create a slightly richer, more bassy sound without compromising on apparent detail, the two headphones are very similar to one another. With the UE-10 Pros, the company promised professional-caliber accuracy; with the triple.fi 10 Pros, it appears that Ultimate Ears is aiming for a more “enjoyable,” less precise type of sound.


 

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

For similar reasons, the triple.fis do outstrip Etymotic’s vaunted ER-4P earphones overall, particularly in low-end performance, where the Etymotics have always been tight and detail-focused by comparison with warmer, bigger-sounding alternatives. The difference in bass is even more noticeable here than with the UE-10 Pros, which had dedicated low-end speakers inside; in essence, the triple.fi is a ER-4P for bass fans, at a $100 premium. (For reference, Ultimate Ears’ super.fi 5 EB was made for bass fans, but fell a step below the ER-4Ps in sound quality; the triple.fis add less bass but sound markedly better overall.)


 

Review: Ultimate Ears triple.fi 10 Pro Earphones

The only place where the triple.fi 10 Pros fall short on audio is by direct comparison with Shure’s E500PTH earphones, which established a new gold standard for triple-driver sound: truly full-frequency and detailed across the spectrum, with just enough power in the low-end and sparkle on the high-end to make music sound agreeably better rather than over-exaggerated to different types of listeners. As was the case when the E500s were compared with the UE-10 Pros, the triple.fi’s sound is flatter, lacking the E500’s punch, and with less distinction between individual instruments.


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