These are the wireless ANC headphones I'd buy. They fill the portable headphone spot for your travels or for listening anywhere you might appreciate some noise cancelling in a
sound quality-first headphone design. B&W's noise cancelling has really come a long way since the days when it would interfere with the full resolution and frequency spectrum of your sound. Gone are the days when active noise cancelling meant contorting high frequencies into the upper-midrange and an ever-present hiss. Overall sound quality with ANC sounds better on than disabled in areas with low-level midrange noise, perfect for those times you need to get some work done at a busy coffee shop or traveling at an airport. The B&W Music app lets you disable noise cancelling altogether and Px7 S3 are the first Bowers & Wilkins headphones to include a 5-band EQ, if you don't count the Pi8 earbuds.
What's really has interesting potential in Bowers & Wilkins' successor-headphones to the Px7 S2 are the new features that push the limits of Bluetooth 5.2, including Bluetooth LE Audio, Auracast and aptX Lossless. Device compatibility requirements may make them future considerations for most users, but we'll soon see if Auracast becomes a thing. If you happen to be using a Snapdragon Sound phone, you can immediately benefit from aptX Lossless and enjoy the highest Bluetooth bandwidth available so far. More details about these new features, and Bowers & Wilkins unique take on
spatial audio are all in the full review of Px7 S3 linked below.
Bowers & Wilkins Px7 S3 ANC Headphone Review: Bluetooth 5.2 Futurism in a Worthy Upgrade
