We've all been there. Headphones that cost you a hundred quid or two snap in half right where the headband meets the ear cup. Or the pads start shedding black plastic dandruff onto your neck like the headphones have contracted leprosy. Always the same spot. Always the same story.
It's not a coincidence.
Designed to break
Big headphone manufacturers aren't stupid. They know exactly where the plastic will give up after 14 months of use – just conveniently outside the warranty period. That's engineering too, just pointed in the wrong direction.
Three classic failure points:
- Headband hinge: A thin plastic swivel that flexes a thousand times and snaps on attempt number one thousand and one. Repairability: zero. Gluing it holds for about a week.
- Cable strain relief: The spot where the wire enters the ear cup. You bend it every single day. The copper strand inside breaks. Audio starts cutting out on one channel.
- Ear pads: Cheap synthetic leather disintegrates in about a year. That's not a manufacturing defect – it's a material choice. Cheaper material, better margins, faster repeat purchase.
This isn't a conspiracy theory. It's a business model. If headphones lasted ten years, you'd buy headphones once a decade. That's bad business if you're a publicly traded company promising shareholders eternal growth.
Repairability is a design choice
At Valco, we do things differently. Not because we're somehow morally superior – but because we're a 14-person company from Oulu, and we can't afford to lose customers. Henri's Alfa Romeo already eats enough money in maintenance costs, so we know from personal experience what it feels like when stuff breaks.
Valco headphones are designed so that parts can be replaced. Pads twist off and new ones snap right into place. The headband lasts because we use materials that last – not because it's cheap, but because Jasse's ears deserve better. And so do yours.
If something does break – electronics are electronics, and nothing lasts forever – we have our own repair service in Kajaani. The device gets fixed. We don't automatically send a replacement, because that would be a stupid waste of resources. We fix what's broken.
But what about the pads?
Yes, our pads wear out too. All pads wear out. That's physics. The human head is a warm, sweaty, oily environment – not exactly laboratory conditions.
The difference is that you can swap our pads yourself in three seconds. Twist off, snap new ones on. No need to bin the entire headphones just because there's a hole in the ear pad.
Pads used for over a year will deteriorate with normal use. That's wear and tear, not a warranty issue. But new pads cost a fraction of the price of new headphones.
Summary for those who couldn't be bothered to read
Headphones always break in the same spot because they're designed that way. The manufacturer wants you to buy new ones. We want you to buy from us once and tell your mates about it. Every purchase funds our Death Star by roughly 0.000001 percent, so sure, we'll happily take repeat purchases too – but preferably because you're buying a speaker on top of your headphones, not the same headphones again because the last pair fell apart.