Select Page

Blue tooth bites your ear

 

The piece intended for the next presentation has already been given a larger box due to its larger size. The P281 is a more professional piece than the P311 shown on the previous page. We gladly unpacked and quickly connected it to the amplifier that got Ray Charles ’voice from a SACD.

Blue tooth bites in your ear 1

Before we report on the experience, let’s see the features! 109 dB sensitivity, 32 ohms, sound range from 20 hertz to 22 thousand kilohertz, 50 milliwatt output power, 50 millimeter diameter for radiators. For the hollow ears, these data also reveal that we are dealing with a mid-range structure.
 

Blue tooth bites in your ear 2

With the amplifier, the player, and the audio, we posed a serious challenge to the poor ear. The bass sounded a little better than average, the treble a little worse than average. The middle range sounded most clearly, but the overall performance was pretty much spoiled by the fact that it sounded a little dull.

Blue tooth bites in your ear 3

It’s important to mention that for some inexplicable (or more fully understandable) reason, we expected more when we picked up the ear, although if we look at the data sheet, we can immediately figure out what we’re getting. This structure deceived us. Maybe the gold-plated, threaded plug, maybe the structure made of quality materials is better than the average headphones, which would have put us in the expensive, top category at a glance.

Blue tooth bites in your ear 4

It is a question then that overall how we evaluate quality. It may come as a surprise, but we should definitely appreciate it, as it would achieve an upscale position in the category in which it was positioned with its price. It has a place in this field in terms of sound, and as we wrote in terms of elaboration, we can’t really get involved in it, in fact.

 

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.