Tin Hifi T1S VS Tanchjim Zero Ultima

IEM Comparison: Expert & Community Scores Side-by-Side

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Tin Hifi T1S and Tanchjim Zero Ultima use 1DD and 1DD (DMT+4Ultra, dual-chamber) driver setups respectively. Tin Hifi T1S costs $20 while Tanchjim Zero Ultima costs $20. Tin Hifi T1S is $0 more expensive. Tanchjim Zero Ultima holds a decisive 4.6-point edge in reviewer scores (1 vs 5.6). Tanchjim Zero Ultima has significantly better bass with a 3.8-point edge, Tanchjim Zero Ultima has significantly better mids with a 4.4-point edge, Tanchjim Zero Ultima has significantly better treble with a 4.2-point edge, Tanchjim Zero Ultima has significantly better details with a 3.6-point edge and Tanchjim Zero Ultima has significantly better imaging with a 4.2-point edge.

Insights

Metric Tin Hifi T1S Tanchjim Zero Ultima
Bass 1 4.8
Mids 1 5.4
Treble 1 5.2
Details 1 4.6
Soundstage 1 4.8
Imaging 1 5.2
Dynamics 1 5.3
Tonality 1 5.8
Technicalities 1 4.4
Take these comparisons with a grain of salt—we don't have enough Tin Hifi T1S and Tanchjim Zero Ultima reviews saved yet to provide an unbiased result.

Tin Hifi T1S Aggregated Review Score

Average Reviewer Scores

Nymz

Average Reviewer Score:

1

Abysmal


Tanchjim Zero Ultima Aggregated Review Score

Average Reviewer Scores

Z-Reviews Web Search
Head-Fi.org

Average Reviewer Score:

5.6

Mixed


Reviews Comparison

Tin Hifi T1S (more reviews)

Tin Hifi T1S reviewed by Nymz

Nymz 1 Reviewer Score
E- Tuning
E- Tech
Very warm. Mid-bass enphasys that bleed into mids. Treble is well done and on the darker side. Doesn't feel technical. EQ helps.

Nymz original ranking

Nymz Website

Bass: E- Mids: E- Treble: E- Details: E- Imaging: E-

Tanchjim Zero Ultima (more reviews)

Tanchjim Zero Ultima reviewed by Z-Reviews

2025-10-02
Z-Reviews 5 * score rescaled + normalized
Youtube Video Summary

Tanchjim Zero Ultima comes in dirt-cheap and unapologetically simple: an attached 3.5 mm cable with inline mic, featherweight shells (~2.3 g), and hilariously oversized nozzles for such tiny housings. Build cues scream budget—y-split quirks and all—but the box stuffs in a plush pouch, a stack of tips, and a manual with more pages than dollars. Under the hood sits a 10 mm double-chamber DD (DMT4), and it can want a bit of juice, yet nothing a normal source can’t handle.

Sonically, this is shock therapy for the price bracket: huge, cinematic soundstage that projects like a mini “screen” in front, with a surprisingly balanced tuning—not a bass cannon, not a treble sabre. Kick drums land with a clean thump, strings float way out without turning sharp, and the overall presentation stays cohesive instead of “fake-detail” crispy. It’s the kind of set that makes $20–$25 feel like a typo, happily chewing through AC/DC, Barry White, Pink Floyd, and Deadmau5 without crying mercy.

Value play is off the charts: call it a $40 performer sold for pocket change, perfect as a daily beater or keychain set. If a detachable cable is a must, the Bunny sibling stands by, but Zero Ultima’s stage and easygoing balance are the party trick here. Bottom line: audiophile nonsense in the best way—ridiculous width, no harshness tax, and an infectious fun factor that embarrasses pricier toys.


Z-Reviews original ranking

Z-Reviews Youtube Channel

Tanchjim Zero Ultima reviewed by Head-Fi.org

Head-Fi.org 6.6 * score rescaled + normalized
15 community members have rated the TANCHJIM Zero Ultima at an average of 4.2/5 on Head-Fi. Overall sentiment: Very Positive.

URL to full Review

Head-Fi.org original ranking

Tanchjim Zero Ultima reviewed by Web Search

2025-10-03
uses AI-Search to turn user, reddit and head-fi reviews into clear, concise summaries.
Web Search 5.1 Reviewer Score
B- Tuning
C- Tech

The Tanchjim Zero Ultima uses a single dynamic driver with a dual-chamber design (DMT 4 Ultra), rated at 30 Ω, 123 dB/Vrms sensitivity and a 10–48 kHz claimed response; build is very light and the cable includes an inline mic on the 3.5 mm version. These specifications point to easy drivability from phones and dongles, though the relatively high sensitivity can expose source noise. Pricing sits firmly in the budget tier (about €19.90 in the EU), which sets expectations for technical performance.

Tonally, Zero Ultima trends warm-neutral / neutral-with-bass-lift: a modest mid-bass rise for body, forward yet controlled upper-mids for clarity, and generally smooth treble that avoids harsh peaks. This aligns with reports describing an easy, “safe” balance that works across genres without obvious problem areas, though it’s not the most airy set.

Technicalities are respectable for the price: detail retrieval is decent and imaging is tidy, but soundstage is on the intimate side and macrodynamic slam is limited compared with higher-end single-DD sets. Ergonomics are generally friendly, though the relatively large nozzle (≈6.4–6.5 mm) may challenge smaller ears; tip choice matters for both fit and bass seal. Overall, Zero Ultima offers a competent, neutral-leaning tuning with honest—but not class-leading—technical performance at a very low cost.


Bass: C Mids: C+ Treble: C+ Dynamics: C+ Soundstage: C Details: C Imaging: C+

Tin Hifi T1S User Review Score

Average User Scores

Average User Score: n/a

Based on 0 user reviews

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Tanchjim Zero Ultima User Review Score

Average User Scores

Average User Score: n/a

Based on 0 user reviews

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Tin Hifi T1S Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade

  • The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.

Gaming Score

1

Gaming Grade

E-

Tanchjim Zero Ultima Gaming Score

Gaming Score & Grade

  • The gaming score is prioritizing technical capabilities of the IEM (Separation, Layering, Soundstage) and good value.

Gaming Score

4.8

Gaming Grade

C

Tin Hifi T1S Scorings

Average Technical & Tuning Grades

Average Tunign Grade

E-
  • Balance is severely off, producing a harsh, unpleasant listen regardless of genre. Long sessions quickly become exhausting.

Average Technical Grade

E-
  • A foggy, one-dimensional presentation wipes out layering and obscures the finer points of a mix. Spatial cues barely register at all.
Bass E-
The response is anaemic, with bass lines fading into the background. There's minimal vibration or physicality.
Mids E-
Midrange sits extremely recessed, burying vocals under a muddy veil. Lead vocals hide far behind the mix.
Treble E-
The top end feels muffled, with air and shimmer barely audible. Ambient reverb tails are chopped short.
Details E-
Extremely poor resolution causes fine details to vanish, leaving only a vague impression of the music's structure. Everything sounds blurred and undefined.
Imaging E-
The image struggles to differentiate directions, so instruments smear together. Spatial clarity is almost nonexistent.
Gaming E-
Compromised imaging significantly impacts gameplay awareness. Directional cues often lack accuracy or consistency.

Tanchjim Zero Ultima Scorings

Average Technical & Tuning Grades

Average Tunign Grade

B-
  • The tuning leans easygoing, yet occasional unevenness nudges it away from greatness. A bit of EQ polish can smooth things nicely.

Average Technical Grade

C-
  • Textural information blurs together, making the stage feel pinched and gray. Instrument edges blur together frequently.
Bass C
The bass remains polite, offering definition without much drive. Dynamics remain gentle even at higher volume.
Mids C+
The region sounds agreeable overall, delivering clarity without flashiness. Slight warmth keeps things easy-going.
Treble C+
Treble feels agreeable overall, bringing sparkle without significant fatigue. You get a polite sense of air.
Dynamics C+
You get reliable macrodynamics, with micro shifts that remain only adequate. A reliable performer for most tracks.
Soundstage C
Stereo spread is acceptable, yet the image resembles a stage set without depth behind the curtain. Depth feels more like a gentle slope.
Details C
It conveys the core of each track yet glosses over the quieter gestures underneath. Delicate details remain a bit subdued.
Imaging C+
A stable phantom center appears, lending vocals a consistent anchor. It maintains a coherent phantom center.
Gaming C
Minimal environmental definition provides only general audio cues. Suitable for games where positioning isn't critical.

Tin Hifi T1S User Reviews

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Tanchjim Zero Ultima User Reviews

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