Beyerdynamic DT 880 (600 Ω)
Beyerdynamic’s neutral-bright reference — even mids, airy treble, and a characteristic top-end lift. The 600 Ω version wants a proper amp.
Our take
The DT 880 is a clean, neutral-bright monitor: flat through the mids with an airy, slightly lifted treble that some love and some EQ down a touch. This is the 600 Ω version — it needs real voltage, and it rewards it.
Measured by Jamey Warren on a Head Acoustics HMS II.3 artificial head — raw response, left/right averaged, normalized to 0 dB at 1 kHz. From the Sonic Temple Archive(2008–2014, one unit per model). Honest limits: seating variance runs ±0.4 dB in the mids to ±3.9 dB above 12 kHz, and open headphones read bass-light on this fixture — don’t read fine treble detail as settled. How we measure →
Common questions
Straight answers — the same ones our measurements support.
Does the DT 880 600-ohm need an amp?
Yes. 600 Ω is voltage-hungry; laptop and phone outputs will run out of clean volume. A proper amp is the whole point of the 600 Ω version.
Is the DT 880 bright?
It has a characteristic upper-treble lift, so it can read airy or sharp depending on the track. A small dip around 8–10 kHz calms it while keeping the air.
DT 880 vs DT 990 vs DT 770?
880 is the neutral-bright semi-open middle; 990 is open and more V-shaped; 770 is closed with more bass. Same family, three voicings.
If you like the DT 880 (600 Ω)
Close on the graph, or a deliberate step in one direction.