Achieving a natural sound signature in in-ear headphones remains a fundamental engineering challenge. Even well-designed products that closely follow established target curves can sound sharp, muted, or inconsistent in real listening conditions.
A major reason is often overlooked: the ear canal’s acoustic behavior changes once an in-ear device is inserted.
From 3 kHz to 8 kHz: What In-Earphones Really Do
By sealing the ear canal, an in-earphone converts the ear from a quarter-wave resonator to a half-wave resonator. The result is a new dominant resonance around 8 kHz, while the natural 2.5–3 kHz boost disappears entirely.
This shift has two critical consequences for tuning engineers:
- The missing 3 kHz energy must be recreated by the earphone itself to preserve natural tonality.
- The new 8 kHz resonance must be handled carefully, as its exact frequency depends on ear geometry and insertion depth—and is often exaggerated by standard measurement couplers.
In practice, aggressive EQ at 8 kHz often causes more problems than it solves. Broad, cautious compensation works better, but it cannot fully address the underlying acoustic trade-off in single-driver designs.
Why Single-Driver Designs Hit a Wall
A single speaker optimized to reproduce the 2.5–3 kHz presence region will typically struggle to deliver smooth, controlled output from 3–10 kHz. The result is a familiar compromise: either dull upper mids or sharp, unstable treble peaks.
This is where architecture matters more than EQ.
How USound Solves the 3–10 kHz Problem
USound’s MEMS-based 2-way audio modules, now embedded in products such as the QCY MeloBuds N70, are addressing exactly this acoustic reality.
By combining:
- a traditional ED speaker that naturally supports the bass to mid-region, with
- a dedicated MEMS tweeter optimized for controlled mid to high-frequency output.
This enables engineers to gain precise control over the most critical and difficult tuning range, without relying on fragile, insertion-dependent EQ tricks.
The result is:
- more consistent tuning across ears and fits,
- smoother treble behavior,
- and a sound signature that better matches real listening expectations.
Engineering for Real Ears, Not Just Measurement Couplers
Ear canal resonance is not a theoretical detail—it is a structural constraint of in-ear audio. Designs that acknowledge it outperform those that fight it.
USound’s MEMS speaker technology does not change ear acoustics, but it gives engineers the tools to work with them, enabling natural-sounding, scalable, and production-ready in-ear designs.

Jakob Spötl
