Shure introduces Lightning cable with integrated DAC for sound isolating earbuds

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in General Discussion edited January 2017
Following Apple's move away from the longstanding 3.5mm headphone adapter format, Shure on Tuesday announced a Lightning cable with built-in digital-to-analog converter for owners of its earbud products.




Called the Remote + Mic Lightning Accessory Cable, Shure's latest iOS-only product is meant to bridge the gap as Apple transitions from 3.5mm to Lightning. Without a 3.5mm-to-Lightning converter, or in this case a direct cable replacement, Shure's audiophile equipment is incompatible with Apple's latest iPhone 7 handsets.

Along with the usual inline microphone and system controls -- volume and a multifunction button -- Shure built in a specially designed DAC that plays nice with the company's existing headphone lineup. Apple's Lightning protocol transports digital data from iPhone or iPad, meaning connected devices have to supply their own conversion hardware. Apple itself integrated a DAC into the gratis EarPods that ship with iPhone 7.

Shure's cable should benefit from improved sound fidelity as compared to the 3.5mm-to-Lightning adapter Apple includes with every iPhone 7 box, especially considering the highly sensitive earbuds it serves. Whether that perceived boost in sound quality is worth the cable's steep price of admission has yet to be seen.

Shure's "Made for iPhone" Lightning cable is priced at $100 and will work with the SE215, SE315, SE425, SE535 and SE846 when it ships this spring.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 4
    dtb200dtb200 Posts: 48member
    If an external DAC is required, then how does the Apple Lightning to 3.5mm adaptor work?
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  • Reply 2 of 4
    glynhglynh Posts: 133member
  • Reply 3 of 4
    Geez, how much does that thing weigh?
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  • Reply 4 of 4
    mac_128mac_128 Posts: 3,454member
    Geez, how much does that thing weigh?
    I agree, maybe it's just a bad picture, but it looks like it's made of thick inflexible cables, which is the last thing wanted for headphones, to say nothing of lightweight earbuds. The controls are fine, but the integration into the cables is unwieldy to say the least.
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