Sennheiser Wants Your Smelly Old Earbuds

Posted on 10 April 2008 by


If you have a “broken, crusty or damaged” set of earbuds, now might be a good time to consider an upgrade. Sennheiser has a promotion going on, where they will give you from $5 to $25 off their headsets depending upon the set you buy.

Hmmm, I’m not sure if the $5 trade would be worth the price of a priority envelope (currently $4.60ish), but if they’ll take trades in a lumpy paper envelope with a 41¢ stamp, that might be cool…

Lets face it- the earbuds that came with your MP3 player are due for replacement. If you’re sick and tired of the awful earbuds that came free with your portable media player, Sennheiser has the perfect medicine.

It’s time to finally ditch those stale, lousy-sounding earbuds and upgrade to a big-boy headphone. From April 1 through July 31, 2008, upgrade to a high quality pair of Sennheiser’s and they will give you cash just for unloading the old ones…even if they are broken, crusty or damaged. Best of all, you’re likely to find a better type of headphone for your needs than what a stock earbud can provide: sport headphones, in-ear headphones, noise cancelling headphones and more.

Here’s how it works:

Gathers up your old headphones, which can be new, old, broken, used – they don’t care!
Upgrade to a pair of Sennheiser’s (see list below for eligible models)

Mail us the old headphones E-Z trade form and get $$ for your trade. It’s that easy.

Visit Sennheiser to get started.

This post was written by:

- who has written 1699 posts on Gear Diary.

I started Gear Diary on September 30, 2006, and my goal was that this not be an easily labeled site. We all have gear that we use daily – some of it electronic and some of it organic. I think it is fascinating to explore the equipment that makes our lives easier, more entertaining, more productive, and more manageable. My hope is that Gear Diary visitors will find this site to be a comfortable and friendly place to discuss interesting topics – and not only those that are tech related, as well as a location to discover various types of gear – whatever that term may end up implying – that they never knew existed. My specialty is in-depth reviews written in a layman’s terms, because everyone can understand technology, sometimes it just takes a little translating. +Judie Stanford

Contact the author