Bowers & Wilkins Limited Edition Px8 Over-Ear Wireless Headphones, Advanced Active Noise Cancellation, Luxurious Materials, 30-Hour Battery Life, 15-Min Quick Charging, Dark Forest
Original price was: $699.00.$574.99Current price is: $574.99.
Price: $699.00 - $574.99
(as of Jan 13, 2025 01:34:07 UTC – Details)
The Bowers & Wilkins Px8 Over-Ear Wireless Headphones, with a completely redesigned and optimized acoustic system and an all-new angled, ultra-high-resolution carbon drive unit, offers industry-leading audio performance with incredible clarity. Featuring an improved microphone arrangement with 2 external adjustable mics, the Bluetooth headphones ensure exceptional call quality with better voice clarity. Its proprietary, all-new active noise cancellation is designed to block out unwanted external noise, ensuring clear, crisp playback of your favorite tracks. The Bowers & Wilkins Music App, compatible with iOS/Android, allows for easy setup up and pairing and enables you to control the sound and noise cancellation, activate voice control, and more – right from your phone. Offers 30 hours battery life from a 2-hour charge, plus quick charge support delivering 7 hours playback from a 15-minute charge, making it an ideal headset for on-the-go use. Comes with all round improvements to headband that ensure comfort across differing head-shapes, coupled with lightweight aluminum arms and soft Nappa leather for a superior fit and finish.
INDUSTRY-DEFINING AUDIO PERFORMANCE – With a redesigned and optimized acoustic system, an all-new angled, ultra-high-resolution carbon drive unit, the B&W Px8 over-ear wireless headphones deliver detailed audio with superior imaging and increased clarity
NOISE CANCELLING HEADPHONES WITH MIC – The all-new active noise cancellation is designed to block unwanted noise and ensure superior musicality. Features (2) adjustable external microphones that enhance voice clarity, significantly improving call quality
PREMIUM LUXURIOUS DESIGN FOR A COMFORTABLE FIT – With soft Nappa leather and lightweight aluminum arms, and all-round improvements to ear cushion fit, this Bluetooth headset ensures optimum comfort across differing head-shapes even after extended use
EASY OUT-OF-THE-BOX SETUP – The iOS/Android compatible B&W Music App allows you to adjust EQ settings, enable voice control, switch between ANC modes, and more. Use the multi-function button on the ear cup to select from a range of different functions
PERFECT FOR AN ON-THE-GO LIFESTYLE – With 30 hours battery life from a 2-hour charge, plus quick charge support delivering 7 hours playback from a 15-minute charge, these B&W Bluetooth headphones are ideal for commuting, working in an office or travelling
Customers say
Customers find the headphones comfortable and providing good sound quality. They find the sound spectrum balanced without needing EQ. Many customers describe the headphones as great with clear treble, imaging, and decent mids. While some are satisfied with clarity and design, others have mixed opinions on build quality, value for money, and app functionality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
9 reviews for Bowers & Wilkins Limited Edition Px8 Over-Ear Wireless Headphones, Advanced Active Noise Cancellation, Luxurious Materials, 30-Hour Battery Life, 15-Min Quick Charging, Dark Forest
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Original price was: $699.00.$574.99Current price is: $574.99.
JD –
Incredible sound and comfort makes them worth the high asking price
I have spent months (years, really) of research searching for the perfect set of no-compromise, best-at-everything bluetooth ANC headphones at any price. I’ve bought and ended up returning a couple sets that each disappointed in some way or another, and had essentially given up on such a headset ever existing. My priorities are (in order): – Sound (including high-bitrate bluetooth codecs because I prefer to listen wirelessly) – Comfort (especially over many hours on long flights) – Active Noise Canceling (ANC) – Call quality – Quality-of-life features (I like buttons, though I know some prefer touch controls)The recent wave of ultra-premium headphones (Focal Bathys, B&W PX8, M&D MW75, Mark Levinson No. 5909, B&O Beoplay H95, etc.) got my hopes up, and while I don’t think any of them truly hit that “no compromise” standard, the PX8 from Bowers & Wilkins came *very* close, and for me is the best on the market at any price (as of fall 2022).~~~Sound~~~First and foremost, they sound incredible. My wife has the Sony WH-1000XM5’s and while those sound great (significantly better than their Bose counterparts, imho), the PX8’s blow them out of the water on clarity and separation. I won’t try to write up a full audiophile description of the sound because there are plenty of more qualified ones online, but I will give an anecdote: without telling her which headphones or their price tag, I put these on my wife’s head and played a song she loves and has heard many times (instrumental metal, if that matters). She listened quietly and said “It sounds like I’m hearing this song for the first time.”Also important to me is the fact that the sound is on the warm side and easy to listen to for extended periods. I am sensitive to high-frequency sound and often have problems with sibilance or a “sharp” quality to high end audio equipment that strives for upper range extension. These have plenty of detail in the highs, but none of that sharp quality that I personally find irritating.~~~Comfort~~~The other area that the B&W PX8’s really shine is on comfort. I have big ears that stick out a lot, and many over-ear headphones press my ears down in a way that gets uncomfortable. My wife’s Sony XM5’s are a great example – because they have such stellar ANC I like to borrow them for flights, but I can only wear them for a couple hours before my ears get physically sore. The PX8’s have no such problem. They have large earcups, and the angled drivers create a deep space in the back that gently cradles even my Dumbo-esque ears. I keep finding excuses to wear them, because they just feel so good.~~~Active Noise Cancelling~~~This is why I say they aren’t truly “no compromise” headphones. The passive noise blocking is quite good, and the ANC is effective at cutting down outside sound, but it isn’t class-leading. The Sony XM5’s, Bose QC45’s, and Apple Airpods Max all seem to do a better job of creating that total Cone of Silence I crave on long flights. This is a common trend among the most premium audiophile headphones though, and some companies have said that there are engineering trade-offs that have to be made between sound quality and ANC. I’m not sure I’m totally sold on that narrative, but if slightly weaker ANC is the price of this glorious sound quality, then that’s an acceptable trade in my book.~~~Call Quality~~~Very good, my voice can be heard clearly. Not quite as good at blocking out background sounds as the Sony XM5’s or my Jabra headset with a boom mic, but perfectly adequate for the situations I need.~~~Features~~~I love the well-made buttons (I live in a cold weather climate where touch controls are less than ideal), and the app is refreshingly simple. It doesn’t have some bells and whistles (no adjustable ANC, limited EQ options, no voice detection or automatic situational awareness), but it has what I need and works well. The only exception here is on-ear detection, which is finicky and frequently pauses the music even on “low” so I had to turn it off. It’s not a must-have feature for me but might be more bothersome for some.Edit: another issue I have noticed after a couple weeks of use is that the “skip backward” function doesn’t work very well. In theory you can skip backward with a triple-press of the multifunction button, which I do often when I want to go back a few seconds in a podcast, but 80% of the time it either skips forward or pauses instead. Not a huge deal, but annoying.~~~Summary~~~Best-sounding, most comfortable bluetooth ANC headphones I have ever tried. Other features aren’t necessarily the best among the competition – in particular I wouldn’t mind having stronger, adjustable ANC – but they are more than good enough, and all together I think the package justifies the high price.
Omar Quadri –
Fantastic!
These are the best sounding headphones Iâve ever heard. The entire sound spectrum is very balanced without needing EQ. I can hear every fine detail and nuance of the music and instruments. These headphones are a delight just to look at. They are very finely engineered and crafted from high quality aluminum and leather. Despite long periods of use, they do not feel heavy, hot or uncomfortable on the ears. They are expensive but well worth the price for the quality you get.
Kevin W. –
Px7 S2e vs. Px8 – Reach for the 8âs if you can, but the 7âs are excellent if budget constrains
I tested the Px7 S2e âs and the Px8 âs side by side. The pricing was excellent on bothâ$240 for the 7âs and $450 for the 8âs, from the third-party seller GRAMOPHONE, whom I assume are the Amazon presence of Sky by Gramophone. So my review will be colored by the excellent pricing I received.[Update & TL;DR: after writing this review I went in to the kitchen to see about dinner, and a song came on and I did one more side by side test. This song really changed my mind about potentially keeping both the 7âs and 8âs, and gave me resolve to be content only with the 8âs: These Are The Days – Lauren Daigle. I compared the final minute of that song on both, and I have to say with the 8âs that song sounded alive, but on the 7âs the song sounded the way a flat carbonated beverage tastes. It was when the word âaliveâ popped in to my head that I was struck. Itâs almost like those moments in the movies where someone will drop a needle on a record or hit play on a tape deck, and then the music starts playing in the diegetic worldâon set, through microphonesâand then as the scene closes the music transitions out of the movie world into the full-fidelity sound of the theater. So if you can, strive for the 8âs if youâre a music lover and not just after active noise canceling headphones for general purposes. Remember, this sounds like a slam on the 7âs but itâs notâitâs exaggerating a mild difference between two fine products for comparisonâs sake.]After all is said and done, what I found was that when I was testing back and forth between the two, when I had on the 8âs, I tended to get lost in the music and just kept listening and looking for the next song, rather than remembering that I was supposed to be switching back and forth to test. So the 8âs were more immersive and engaging. And I found it happened again while typing this review; the 8âs just lower the barrier between you and the recording. And this could happen at a slightly lower volume on the 8âs than on the 7âs. And it could go without saying, but Iâll say it⦠these both blow the Sony XM4âs out of the water. Airpods Max sound great in their own way, but these are both more refined. (Sony and Apple comparisons are from memory, I no longer own those.)I noticed a couple of phenomena specifically with the 8âsâone that I have not noticed with any other headphones or speakers is that as I settled in with them, I tended to want to turn the volume DOWN. I do not recall any other pair of headphones or speakers where that has been the caseâI feel like with everything else, if Iâm really into the music, I want to turn it up for more⦠whatever, engagement, detail, but after settling in with the 8âs for a few songs, I find that Iâm fully immersed and settled in, and the volume wants reducing with no loss of experience. Really unusualâbut I think thatâs a good thing for delicate ears. The second is that really lousy 60âs stereo ends up being much more pleasant than with other headphones and speakers⦠what I mean is those mixes where one instrument comes completely out of one speaker and another instrument might come entirely out of another. That overwhelming unbalance often sounds terrible to me on a lot of equipmentâbut with the 8âs itâs not so unpleasant. I double checked it against the 7âs and the 8âs really do make it less unpleasant. (Example songs: No Sugar Tonight / New Mother Nature by The Guess Who and Only You Know And I Know by Dave Mason. When the first instrument comes in 100% on one side, thereâs just more pressure against your one ear with most headphones, but for some reason with the 8âs, that imbalance is less profound and exerts less pressure.)Between the 7âs and the 8âs, I feel like the 7âs were more veiled and more muddy. The 8âs had greater clarity and resolution. Iâm fully aware that those are all the words that audiophiles say you arenât supposed to use. But for normal people, those are really representative of the feeling. There is a big difference when you are switching back and forth. Other metaphors might be like 720p vs. 1080p for the 7âs vs. the 8âs. One example would be Rock Steady by Aretha Franklinâthe percussion with the cowbell and güira and the plucks of the bass strings are all more crisp and well defined on the 8âs than on the 7âs. Both have punchy bassâas punchy as you want them to be. The 7âs have punchier bass overall. But I settled in with a -2.0 to -2.5 db cut to the bass in the app on both, and on the 8âs, which are less punchy anyways, the kick drum on Midnight Rider by The Allman Brothers Band and Sweet Love by Anita Baker was still too punchy for my taste, whereas the punchiness of Talkinâ Tennessee by Morgan Wallen was spot-on for me (I didnât switch over the 7âs for those tracks)âand cutting the bass to -3.0 db from -2.0 was not a solution as it brought down the overall experience of the rest of the bass a bit too much. A note about the clarity and resolution of the 8âs thoughâI donât want to imply that itâs an overly trebly quality nor what audiophiles might call overly analyticalâthey are notâthey still have a great deal of intimacy. Both allow you to get intimate with the music, but the 8âs moresoâan example track would be the conclusion of Gratitude by Brandon Lake; Iâd characterize the intimacy as deeper with the 8âs but still present with the 7âsâitâs a matter of intensity. Like the 7âs make you say âgreatâ but the 8âs make you say âwow.â The 8âs literally made me stop what I was doing to pay attention and not miss the moment at the conclusion of that song. (Kinda like that way that old Gap Aâ Go-Go TV commercial for khakis would make households stop, rapt, to watch, because it was shot in one continuous take.) Itâll be interesting to see what happens after burn-in, how and in what ways these headphones will mellow out.A word about vocals. I feel like both are competent with vocals, but nothing to write home about. However, there is one peculiarityâon one particular song, Rise Up (Lazarus) by Cain, the vocals seem to get buried on the 8âs. Theyâre acceptable on the 7âs. But I listened quite a number of times to figure out what was going on, and Iâm not sureâperhaps itâs because itâs a highly-produced, high-complexity song; but I did source it from a CD ripped to ALAC downsampled to 256k AAC, and also tried it with the âVery Highâ quality through Spotify as well, and same results. But on the 8âs, the vocals are really obscured. The only thing I can think is that thereâs some processing going on somewhereâthe lead vocals, backing vocals, the three-part harmonies, are just distant. I pulled out some ânormalâ Airpods Pro 2nd Gen, and the vocals were more normal sounding, and this song always sounds great in my car (Harman Kardon). I compared to a song like Bell-Bottomed Tear by The Beautiful South, with both male and female vocals, and that song sounds normal. So I donât know whatâs going on here but, you know, nothingâs perfect. This might also be revealing a fault in the recording.All of that being said, if you donât have them side by side, after a while, youâll be used to whichever ones you have and either pair is a blessing. So budget is the largest factor in that respect and thereâs no reason to strain for the 8âs if the 7âs are more appropriate for your pocketbook. I think one use case difference might be the following: if youâre going to be walking around listening to books on tape a lot, the 7âs are probably the way to go, since theyâre more comfortable, and if youâre in a city, the noise and the world will be distractingâwhat would the 8âs be doing for you in those situations? Ditto for the 7âs if youâre going to be concentrating on work and not the music. If youâre going to be sitting at home, immobile, focused on music, thatâs the main use case that shouts out that the 8âs are most appropriate. Albeit, as Iâm typing these words, and multitasking, Iâm listening to the 8âs and Iâm probably happier with the 8âsâso am I a hypocrite?Both the 7âs and the 8âs are:* The least fatiguing wearables Iâve experienced, in the sonic sense. (For me the Airpods Max were exceptionally fatiguing.)* Lack that âvacuum packedâ feeling when the noise cancellation is on. At home, itâs very hard to tell the difference between the three modes if thereâs no external sound (both in terms of sound quality and the feeling in your ears and body)âI have to snap my fingers to be certain what the configuration is. With Sony XM4âs, by contrast, you can tell in your body.* Laggy to connect to the app⦠to look at the settings on the app, it can take 2 to 10 seconds for the app to connect even when theyâre currently in use. Sometimes it takes multiple attempts. The app can show they are disconnected when in use too. This is no biggie because how often are you going to adjust the settings after youâre settled in with them?* You can adjust the settings with the app while you are listening to an audio source on a different device entirely.Px8 âs are:* Less comfortable, less headband padding, more pressure on jaw bone (my head is already narrowâI need narrow eyeglass frames), warmer than the 7âs* Physically fatiguing near the jaw hinge for me.* Bass is pleasing and not overly punchy on most tracks.Px7 S2e âs are:* More comfortable, have more headband padding, softer ear cups, cooler that the 8âs* Less physically fatiguing for me.* Punchier bass – a negative for me.* More âforgivingâ of inferior recordingsHonestlyâone use case which is making me feel like I could keep bothâthe Px7 S2e âs might be nice as my outdoor headphones for listening to audiobooks and a less expensive loss if I get mugged since Iâm in a city, and the Px8 âs could stay home for music and less distracted situations. I donât know if I need two, butâ¦I suppose only keeping one pair, the higher sound quality of the 8s would trump the greater comfort of the 7s. Iâll see how it plays out. What Iâm finding, though, is because the 8âs sound so much better, I put up with the physical discomfort and donât want to take them off and switch to the 7âs for music. For voice, lectures, audiobooks, TV, phone calls, Zoom calls, the 7âs would be the way to go. One use case to think about if youâre on the fence or donât want to overextend your wallet⦠the 8âs are so good, they will really highlight the imperfections of poor quality recordingsâbecause they are just older, pre-stereo, have tape hiss, or done on poor equipment or garage studiosâI really noticed this on You Go To My Head – Dinah Washington (Dinah Jams, live, mono), or old funk recordings like Dirty Ole Man – Irene Reid; Seeds Of Life – East LA Car Pool; I Get What I Want – The Sequins. With a song like Go For Yourself – Kenny Smith & The Loveliters, the levels must be clipped on the master tapes and there is distortion, which the 7âs are more forgiving about than the 8âs. If you listen mostly to older music and have budget constraints, the 7âs might be the way to go.I have a hunch that the 8âs might be the height of what is achievable within the bounds of bluetooth today. I have compared the Focal Bathysâand Iâd think theyâre too analytical and fatiguing (sonically) for me, even though I love detail, a vast soundstage, and that in-the-room feeling (see my review of those too).Other representative test tracks I used: Smoke a Little Smoke – Eric Church; Driveway – Cody Johnson; You Set My Soul – The Telescopes; Canât You See – The Marshall Tucker Band; Blown a Wish – My Bloody Valentine; the popular Gordon Lightfoot numbers; Fall For Me – Brett Eldredge; Cheap Seats – Emily Scott Robinson; Christmas Time is Here – Zach Williams; Beginnings – Chicago; This Here – The Cannonball Adderly Quintet (â¦in San Francisco); Desafinado – Stan Getz, João Gilberto; Little Lulu – Bill Evans Trio; Upstage Rumba – Dave BrubeckNote for the chemically sensitiveâthe 8âs smell worse than the 7âs on day one. (Iâm writing this on day one.) The cases for both are identical and also stink worse than the headphones. Howeverâthe good news is that Iâm pretty chemically sensitive and my mucus membranes donât react to these, so hopefully that is helpful data.
Rusnuvol –
Gets High Marks on Everything, but very terrible ANC.
This headphone is very well built, with quality materials. It looks good, is comfortable. Very loud and clear when listening to music. Amazing battery life as well. I charge it about every 2 weeks. The one issue is the ANC. It feels more like an idea than a feature. The ANC is pretty terrible. I don’t know it’s on until i turn it off and the NYC Subway gets a bit louder, a bit. The XM5’s which i owned and is cheaper than this, has way better ANC. This one is just better built unlike the plastic XM5 (mine suddenly broke, hence me buying this). Great device overall. Looks good, solid, quality, just crappy ANC, really crappy ANC. It shouldn’t be Active Noise Cancellation, it should be Passive Noise Cancellation, or Optional Noise Cancellation.
vic valencia –
Son de los mejores audÃfonos que he tenido, y esta edición en particular es extremadamente hermosa y el audio es otro mundo
Pedro Fajardo –
Los AudÃfonos muy bien armados y se escucha perfecto
paulo R. C. Nogueira –
Beira a perfeição !
Amazon Customer –
Headphone com bom som, mas que acaba não valendo nada devido a péssima fabricação e pior ainda sua garantia aqui no Brasil pela heinrich audio. A pior experiência que já tive na minha vida, e considerando que é um headphone premium, isso fica pior ainda. Enviei para a suposta garantia com caixa e todos os itens que acompanhavam, me devolveram cheio de risco, sem caixa, completamente sujo de cola barata e muito mal consertado, feito na hora e na pressa por algum irresponsável que só queria se livrar do problema. Problema, este é o adjetivo que você mais repetirá comprando com a heinrich audio e comprando um PX8 no Brasil.
Ricardo C –
He comprado audÃfonos Sony, Bose y ahora los B&W, definitivamente estos son los mejores que he comprado (y los más caros).La calidad de los materiales es premium, nunca habÃa visto audÃfonos con estos materiales, el simple hecho de abrir el estuche donde vienen es como oler la tapicerÃa de un auto de lujo.La piel es suave al tacto, por lo que si hay que tener cuidado en su trato, no son para llevar al gimnasio, los caparazones son de aluminio muy agradables tambien.Los forros para la oreja simplemente una delicia, no molestan, no sudan las orejas (como me ocurre con Bose y Sony).La calidad el audio es genial, con cualquier ritmo musical implemente lo vas a disfrutar, bajos suaves y profundos, medios y agudos, todos en total armonÃa.La aplicación es de fácil uso y permite un par de ajustes y configuraciones.Definitivamente la mejor comprar para mi audio.