Quantcast
PC World: Technology Advice You Can Trust
Find a Review
Free Newsletters
Receive the latest reviews, how-to's, news, and more.
Bargain Bulletin
Biz-Tech Tips & Reviews
Weekly Brief
WiFi Finder
Locate wireless services by a specific address, city, state, country, airport, or zip code.
RSS Feeds
Get our latest content via convenient RSS feeds.
Latest News
Today @ PC World
Become a PCW Member
Join the community and start enjoying the benefits:
  • Get tech advice from thousands of PC World Members
  • Rate and recommend the latest tech products
  • Share your thoughts in blog and article comments
  • Get free excerpts and exclusive discounts on Super Guides
Reviews
Creative Aurvana X-Fi Noise-Canceling Headphones
Creative Aurvana X-Fi Noise Canceling Headphones (Front)
Creative Aurvana X-Fi Noise Canceling Headphones (Front)
Creative Aurvana X-Fi Noise Canceling Headphones
Creative Aurvana X-Fi Noise Canceling Headphones
90.0 Superior
Last updated
March 24, 2008
Test Center Reviewed by
Darren Gladstone
Pros
  • Improve quality of MP3 files
  • Fit comfortably
Cons
  • Expensive
  • Surround-sound feature doesn’t work well

Creative Aurvana X-Fi Headphones

Noise-canceling headphones improve audio quality.
Recommend this story?

Noise-canceling headphones prevent the roar of jet engines (or PC fans) from marring your listening experience. Creative has now added X-Fi sound card technology to the $300 Aurvana X-Fi noise-canceling headphones. X-Fi technology promises to restore the original sound quality of music compressed into MP3 files and to convert stereo audio into 3D surround sound. Does it work? Yes and no.

Two AAA batteries fuel the headphones. Flick the power on and select the X-Fi option, and the headphones improve most MP3 files. Both 128-kbps and 196-kbps recordings of Green Day's "Minority" had distinctly heftier sound. In fact, X-Fi gave music a boost in any format, compressed or not.

I wish that X-Fi CMSS-3D, the 3D-sound-simulating component of Creative's X-Fi technology, worked as well as the compressed-music enrichment feature did. Unfortunately, most surround simulators fall flat--and X-Fi CMSS-3D is no exception, sacrificing sound quality just to trick your ears. Unless you enjoy listening to music through six tinny channels, forget about using CMSS-3D.

That gripe aside, I found plenty to love. The solidly constructed cans felt good on my head. And though the noise-canceling technology didn't fully silence ambient sounds, it did reduce the drone of a commuter bus.

The Aurvana X-Fi is not inexpensive. But the nearest competitor, Bose's QuietComfort 2, costs just as much and offers half the features. Which would you rather have--headphones that merely block noise, or headphones that block noise and improve your music? The choice is obvious.

Recommend this story?

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)