Xiaomi vs Honor
With my recent reviews of both the Xiaomi
 Piston 3’s and the Honor AM12’s, so close together in time, in origins,
 in positioning and in pricing, the two earphones scream out that they 
are competition for each other.  They both in many ways represent more 
than themselves, they represent their entire brand and to an extent the 
whole company they come from so how can we not look at them, direct and 
head to head.
First up the Piston’s from Xiaomi. The 
company that the media love to call the Chinese “Apple” I think because 
they make products that look good.  Apple in my opinion produce wildly 
over priced products with beyond massive amounts of advertising behind 
them.  Xiaomi on the other hand doesn’t seem to do any advertising, 
instead relying on chatter derived from its flash sales in its home 
land.  It also spits out products that are very keenly priced.  Xiaomi 
have stated that their first forays into Western markets will be not 
through their phone lines but instead through their accessories which 
means products like the Piston’s.
The Pistons therefore represent a 
projection the company is trying to foist on the west, creating some 
brand recognition.  These being the third iteration of what has so far 
been a highly promising line in the world of audio.  They are not the 
finest quality in the world but they are so keenly priced their value is
 off the scale.
Then we look over at Honor.  It’s a brand
 I find curious because its parent company and brand, Huawei, also 
operate in the UK.  I see Honor as being their Western-friendly, 
trendier, little bit hipster brand.  They want the same associations 
between offering a decent product at a stunning cost which is the 
hallmark of both Chinese companies.  They may not quite yet be playing 
with the absolute best in the world but they are absurdly cost 
effective.
Whilst it’s obvious that the companies 
themselves align in their mission statements to some extent, how do 
their products compare?
Sound
Well both are good, rather differently 
flavoured.  The Piston’s being the heavier, more weighty sound and the 
AM12’s being more evenly balanced.  Both offer levels of skill and 
finesse that are pleasing, they aren’t amazing but they are both capably
 good.  The Pistons do edge out as the better of the two but as they are
 the third attempt from Xiaomi it’s not too surprising.  While the 
Pistons are the ostensibly “better” of the two the Honor AM12’s have the
 more evenly balanced and what I’d call more mature flavour to their 
sound.  Both are nice but a quick demo by a more “mainstream audio” 
friend instantly took a liking to the bigger, air shifting bass found on
 the Piston’s.  Personally I think I’d probably take the Honor’s more 
mature sound but I suspect most would opt for the Pistons.
Aesthetics
Sorry Xiaomi but Honor has you whipped 
here.  It’s not that the Pistons are in any way ugly, they are just 
uninspiring.  Then you look at the AM12’s, come on, they look stunning 
don’t they?  I’m a total sucker for silvery, translucent cables and bare
 metal buds.  They look just beautiful.  As pretty as the most pretty 
earphones found anywhere and at any price.
Build Quality:  Again there is nothing 
wrong in any way with the Pistons but……. the Honor’s just look epic.  
Rightly or not bare metal in my head sets of a bell that rings 
“quality.”  Time is the only real way to test so I can’t say which of 
the two is better after a longer period of use.  That combined 
Y-splitter on the Honor might one day cause an issue, who knows.  
Honestly though, both seem really great quality wise.
Isolation
Both are somewhat so so when it comes to 
isolation.  There are acoustic benefits to venting dynamic drivers but 
at the cost of a loss of isolation.  However for those coming from buds,
 or those things from Apple it will be a revelation how much they block 
out.  Neither is particularly better than the other so this is pretty 
much a tie.
Value
I honestly don’t know how to compare them
 for value.  Both are so cheap yet really impressively good sounding for
 their prices.  The best prices I’ve found puts just a fiver between 
them. This means in essence the Piston’s are twice the price of the 
Honor’s AM12’s.  They are not twice as good, they simply aren’t but the 
difference of a fiver perhaps help to grey that particular deciding 
factor. Both really deserve to be thought of good value in equal 
measures, equal in the sense of they are both tremendous.
Conclusion
Well, I don’t know.  That I think is all 
that can be concluded is that whatever the two companies decide to focus
 their efforts on next, there is only one winner; Consumers. To be 
putting out products that are as good as these two and as disturbingly 
cheap, can only mean good things for you and I.  What’s more is the 
potential that lies in their product pipeline.  Rightly or wrongly I 
think of both companies as being “phone” companies but I have never had 
more than a brief play with an Honor phone and I’ve only briefly 
glimpsed a Xiaomi one.  So are their earphones simply supplementary 
products aimed to getting you to think of their phones as a great value 
accompaniment? The alternative is that it’s not a loss leader at all. 
That it is just representative of the new price / quality ratio that is 
coming out of this new breed of Chinese super company.
I 
reiterate, I just don’t know.  The thing is I’m not sure I care. Either 
way it seems to me like a win win for the consumer. So long may it 
continue.
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