Tech
Noble Audio Lu Ban IEMs Debut at CanJam Singapore 2026 With Wooden Dynamic Driver and Dual Super Magnetic Planar Design
Noble Audio has never been a brand that avoids taking risks, and that willingness to try something different has often worked in its favor. The new Lu Ban, unveiled at CanJam Singapore 2026, follows that same path with a design that appears to be more than just another IEM release with a familiar shape and a new name.
Noble brought something distinctive to Singapore, and the real test will be whether the Lu Ban can turn that design ambition into the kind of performance that keeps the brand near the front of the personal audio conversation.
Ancient Chinese Inspiration Meets Modern IEM Design
The Lu Ban takes its name from the legendary Chinese craftsman and inventor associated with precision, problem-solving, and practical ingenuity. Noble Audio is using that reference to frame a universal IEM that combines natural materials with a more advanced hybrid driver platform.
It is a fitting name for a product that appears focused on craftsmanship as much as performance. The Lu Ban sits as a new statement within Noble’s universal IEM lineup, and the key question is whether its design and engineering choices translate into a more distinctive listening experience.
The Lu Ban uses a three-driver configuration built around a 10mm wooden composite diaphragm dynamic driver and two newly developed Super-Magnetic planar drivers. The dynamic driver is intended to handle weight and texture, while the planar drivers are there to support speed, detail, and control.
With a rated 108dB SPL/mW sensitivity and 27-ohm impedance, the Lu Ban should not require a difficult source to drive properly. That matters, because Noble is clearly positioning this as a serious universal IEM that can work across portable players, dongle DACs, and higher-end desktop setups without needing a small power plant attached to your desk.
10mm Wooden Composite Dynamic Driver
The sonic foundation of the Lu Ban is its 10mm wooden composite diaphragm dynamic driver. The use of wood is not just a visual or branding choice. Noble is pointing to its long use in musical instruments, where resonance, density, and tonal behavior all matter.
In the Lu Ban, the wooden composite material is used within the diaphragm structure to support bass depth, control, and texture. Noble says the driver is intended to deliver extended sub bass without excess overhang, while keeping the mid bass articulate and balanced. The same material approach is also designed to give the midrange more body, harmonic weight, and a more natural sense of decay with vocals and acoustic instruments.
The goal is not to add artificial warmth or make the Lu Ban sound deliberately thick. Noble is using the wooden composite driver as the tonal anchor of the IEM, with the aim of giving the Lu Ban a more physical, natural, and musically grounded presentation.
Dual Super-Magnetic Planar Technology
To support the 10mm wooden composite dynamic driver, the Lu Ban also uses two Super Magnetic planar drivers. Noble says these drivers are derived from planar driver technology used in select loudspeakers, with the goal of improving speed, clarity, and upper frequency precision inside a compact IEM design.
The Super Magnetic planar drivers use a new generation neodymium iron boron magnetic material, refined with a controlled copper element to help stabilize magnetic flux and improve efficiency. In practical terms, Noble is using this driver system to improve transient response, micro detail retrieval, separation, and treble extension.
The planar drivers are intended to add clarity, air, and better layering without pushing the Lu Ban into an overly bright presentation. Noble says high frequencies extend cleanly, while more complex recordings remain organized and intelligible.
Acoustic Chamber
Noble also uses a Mortise and Tenon Acoustic Chamber inside the Lu Ban to help manage internal driver resonance. The chamber includes an irregular diffusion structure that is intended to reduce standing waves created by internal sound reflections. At the front, a spiral airflow guide is used to limit unwanted noise while helping preserve phase coherence.
In practical terms, the chamber is there to improve control inside the shell so the drivers can operate with less interference from reflections, resonance, and airflow issues.
Crafted with Purpose
As noted earlier, the Noble Lu Ban takes its name from the legendary Chinese craftsman Lu Ban, and that influence carries into the physical construction of the IEMs.
Each shell combines Cocobolo wood with a 3D printed resin internal framework. The wood gives each pair a distinct grain pattern, while the resin structure allows Noble to maintain more consistent internal geometry, driver placement, and acoustic alignment from unit to unit.
The result is a design that uses natural material for the exterior character, but relies on controlled internal construction for acoustic consistency. Each pair should look slightly different, but the engineering target remains the same.
Premium Cable & Accessories
The Lu Ban ships with a 4 strand woven high purity OCC silver plated cable. Noble specifies the cable as part of the package rather than an afterthought, with the goal of maintaining signal integrity and tonal consistency from source to IEM.
The cable uses a fiber woven surface coating, standard 0.78mm 2 pin connectors with left and right markings, and a 4.4mm copper gold plated balanced termination. That makes it ready for many modern DAPs, portable DAC amps, and balanced desktop headphone outputs without requiring an immediate cable swap.
A 3.5mm option would have been useful for wider compatibility, but Noble is clearly aiming this package at listeners already using balanced portable sources.
Lu Ban IEM Specifications
| Noble Audio Model | Lu Ban |
| Product Type | IEMs |
| Price | $1399 / £1299 / €1499 |
| Driver Configuration | 10mm Wooden Composite Diaphragm Dynamic Driver + Dual Super-Magnetic Planar Drivers |
| Sensitivity | 108dB SPL/mW |
| Impedance | 27Ω |
| Cable | 4-strand woven high-purity OCC silver-plated cable |
| Connector Type | 0.78mm 2-pin |
| Termination | 4.4mm copper gold-plated balanced plug |
| Included Accessories | IEM storage box Ear tip storage box 9 pairs of ear tips Warranty service card |
Key Features
Hybrid Driver Configuration: The Lu Ban uses a 10mm wooden composite diaphragm dynamic driver paired with dual Super Magnetic planar drivers, giving Noble a platform designed to balance body, speed, and precision.
Natural, Controlled Low End: The wooden composite dynamic driver is intended to deliver deeper bass response with texture and control, while keeping the mid bass articulate rather than bloated.
Detailed and Refined Highs: The Super Magnetic planar drivers support the dynamic driver by adding faster transient response, cleaner detail retrieval, and more extended high frequency performance.
Balanced Hybrid Tuning: Noble’s goal is to combine the weight and tonal character of the dynamic driver with the clarity, air, and separation provided by the planar drivers.
Precision Crafted Shell Design: The Lu Ban uses a Cocobolo wood shell with a 3D printed resin internal structure, allowing for natural visual variation while supporting consistent driver placement and acoustic geometry.
Premium Cable Package: The Lu Ban includes a 4 strand OCC silver plated cable with 0.78mm 2 pin connectorsand a 4.4mm balanced termination, along with additional accessories.
The Bottom Line
The Noble Audio Lu Ban stands out because it does not follow the usual hybrid IEM formula. The combination of a 10mm wooden composite dynamic driver, dual Super Magnetic planar drivers, Cocobolo wood shells, and a Mortise and Tenon Acoustic Chamber gives it a more distinctive design story than most wired IEMs in this price range.
At around $1,400, the Lu Ban is not entry level, especially compared to Noble’s $700 Van Gogh, but it also sits well below the company’s $4,500 Kronos. What is missing? Wireless capability, for one. Like most serious IEMs, the Lu Ban is wired only, so there is no Bluetooth unless you add a wireless adapter from brands like iFi. A 3.5mm cable option also would have made the package more flexible for casual users.
The Lu Ban is really for listeners who already understand the appeal of wired IEMs: dedicated audiophiles, serious portable audio users, and studio listeners who want detail, control, and a more distinctive material design. Its 108dB sensitivity and 27 ohm impedance suggest it should work well with a quality dongle DAC, but a good DAP with a balanced 4.4mm output is the more natural match. Think less phone accessory, more serious portable rig without needing a brick in your pocket.
Price & Availability
The Noble Lu Ban IEM is available for $1,399 / £1,299 / €1,499 at Noble and selected retailers worldwide.
CANJAM Singapore 2026 attendees will be among the first globally to experience Lu Ban in person on May 16th and 17th, 2026.
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