Studio Pro vs DT 1990 Pro MK II
A side-by-side readout for driver size.
Understanding driver size
Driver size is a numeric spec measured in mm. On this metric, higher values are generally better, but returns diminish past category-typical thresholds — going from a low value to a mid value usually matters far more than going from a mid value to a high one. When comparing two products, focus on the percentage gap rather than the raw delta: a 200-unit lead means something very different at the low end of the range than at the high end. Pay attention to the unit, too — manufacturers sometimes quote peak or burst figures that are not sustained in real-world use. Cross-check the published number against independent measurements where possible, especially for performance and battery claims. Finally, remember that a single spec rarely tells the whole story; the Mars Score weighs driver size together with the rest of the spec sheet so one outlier doesn't distort the verdict.
This matchupDT 1990 Pro MK II's 45mm is roughly 13% higher than Studio Pro's 40mm (a 5mm 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.
Other specs on this comparison
See the full Kulaklıklar category for all products ranked by Mars Score.