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Canpur CP622B Titanium First Look: Clear as Glass

748 views· 18 likes· 13:11· Jul 21, 2025

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A new iteration and a different take of the CP622B from Campur. The Limited Titanium edition with only 100 copies in the world. Thanks to Jaben for Loaning me the copy! https://www.jaben.com/products/canpur-cp622b-ti 00:00 Introduction 01:41 First Impression 03:07 vs Original 04:32 vs A64 Solo 06:15 vs Fugaku 10:25 Final Thoughts -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IEM Measurements: https://zpreviews.com/2024/07/29/measurements/ Contact me for Collab/Reviews: Audio Reviews: https://zpreviews.com Photography Website: https://zpeaktures.squarespace.com/contact Email: zpeaktures@gmail.com Like my content? Support me and my reviews via Kofi! https://ko-fi.com/zpeaktures Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zpeaktures/ Audio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zp_reviews Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Zpeaktures Headfi: https://www.head-fi.org/members/tassardar.154433/#showcase-reviews Video Shot with Canon C200 Canon CN-E 18-80mm Sennheiser MKH 8060

About This Video

In this first look, I’m checking out the Canpur CP622B TI (Titanium) — a limited edition run (100 units) that looks almost identical to the original CP622B, except it’s that gunmetal titanium metal build. The big question I wanted to answer is simple: does it actually sound different, and is it better—especially when it costs more? Huge thanks to Jaben for loaning me the set, because it lets me do the comparisons properly without having to buy every single thing just to satisfy my curiosity. Sound-wise, my first impression was immediate: it’s clear, clean, airy, and slightly cool. Vocals sit right in front of you with that “you can hear the nuances” kind of rendering, bass is present with good punch and depth (but not overwhelming), and the treble is there without getting sibilant. Once I compared it to the original CP622B, the differences got more obvious: the original is warmer, richer, and has more sub-bass quantity, while the TI feels tighter and comes across clearer with a bit more sparkle. I also compared it to my A64 Solo and my Fugaku. The standout trait of the CP622B TI is perceived mid clarity—my “clear as glass” description. Fugaku still wins on bass impact, stage size, and overall technical separation, but the CP622B TI stays extremely competitive if what you want is that ultra-clean, airy vocal-focused presentation. As always: don’t buy on first impressions—compare, because audio memory sucks (mine included).

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