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Spec drill · Impedance

Beoplay HX vs Major V

A side-by-side readout for impedance.

Bang & Olufsen · Beoplay HX
21Ω
Marshall · Major V
32Ω
▲ Lead
VerdictMajor V wins on impedance.
Context

Understanding impedance

Impedance determines how much voltage is needed to drive a headphone to a given volume.

Categories

  • 16–32 Ω — IEMs, most consumer cans. Run loud from a phone.
  • 32–80 Ω — premium portable headphones. Phone works; dedicated amp adds headroom.
  • 150–250 Ω — studio/Hi-Fi (DT 770, HD 600 family). Need a real amp.
  • 300–600 Ω — pro studio. Definitely need an amp.

Why high-impedance exists

Higher-impedance drivers can be wound with thinner wire, allowing tighter motor systems and more accurate transient response — at the cost of needing more voltage to drive.

Sensitivity matters too

A 32 Ω headphone at 85 dB/mW sensitivity may be quieter than a 300 Ω one at 110 dB/mW. Always read impedance + sensitivity together.

This matchupMajor V's 32Ω is roughly 52% higher than Beoplay HX's 21Ω (a 11Ω gap). Whether that gap is noticeable depends on workload — small percentage gaps rarely change day-to-day experience, while gaps of 20% or more usually do.

Glossary

What is impedance?

A headphone's electrical resistance to AC current, in ohms (Ω). Low-impedance (16–80 Ω) headphones run loud from any phone; high-impedance (250–600 Ω) need a dedicated amplifier.

Read the full Impedance explainer →
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Other specs on this comparison

See the full Casques audio category for all products ranked by Mars Score.