This is where having 2 of these comes in… Personally I love the form factor and size of the Motion Boom and Minirig + Subwoofer, and the Motion Boom Plus is slightly too big – if I’m dedicating an entire ‘slot’ to something, it might as well be something a little bigger and more powerful. It weighs in at 2.5kg/5.5lbs so it’s still not really heavy at all! The original Motion Boom is 1.5kg/3.5lbs so a slight increase from added battery and body. Yeah it has the shoulder strap, but then it’s pretty much a backpack on its own. Meaning – it’s not so easy to carry on my bike, in my backpack, or just around town in general. The Motion Boom Plus is a bit cumbersome to say the least. Most Bluetooth speakers like the Minirigs, JBL units, and OG Motion Boom are small enough to carry with 1 hand or throw in a backpack. This is where some big opinions are to be had – is it too big? Oh yeah and it can also be used as a powerbank for your phone! Will have to keep testing to give more accurate numbers. USB-C charging is happily found again and it charges at 5V/3A, so ~4 hours to charge from dead. You can easily go a whole day or two of playing tunes in the park before having to top up, and weeks at home if playing at casual listening volumes. Overall this is fairly decent and most speakers lose juice within 4 hours at full tilt. Still, all things said and done the battery life is fairly good, hitting about 2-4 hours on 75-100% volume with a slight emphasis to bass on the EQ. The Motion Boom Plus has a 46.1Wh battery while the original Motion Boom has a 37Wh battery, so about 20% more.Īt low volumes you’re across the board going to have better battery life than smaller speakers, but at high volume that 80W power draw kicks in. While they’ve packed in more battery in terms of total juice, the Motion Boom+ draws more power too. Of course EQ and the BASSUP function can help mitigate this pretty well! While this translates very well for house and pop-type music, deep tunes like hiphop or dub will feel this sacrifice. Seems realistic and while maybe exaggerated a bit, it definitely feels like more than 60 watts.Īt maximum volume the speaker compromises deep bass extension for upper bass and mid-bass hit. Supposedly the two titanium woofers draw up to 30W each and the 2 tweeters 10W a piece. 80W power (2 x 30W woofers, 2 x 10W tweeters).Īs they advertise 80W of power output, I’m inclined to believe that.More dynamic overall and generally quite good! It hits those deep 40Hz notes quite well – as it should for the size! The result is a cleaner, deeper, more detailed sound. It’s great! The addition of those tweeters really give more brilliance up top and allow the woofers to focus a bit more low. How is the Motion Boom+ sound quality you ask? I can usually deal with bad softwares, weird connectivity, or lack of waterproofness in favor of raw fidelity. The most important thing about any speaker is the sound quality IMO. Its should be better a strap (more versatile), like JBL Xtreme3.Passive radiators help with bass extension Nice box.Ĭons: The handle is a bit big, but ist comfy. This thing is so loud like one pair two way fine quality cabinet speaker. The Soudcore signal processor is great in this speaker. Pros: Stereo, passive radiators, big battery, solid, nice solid build quality, fantastic sound in little size. I use the Motion Boom a couple day ago, and I'm still amazed on its the pure clear highs, bass sound, in a little tube. (The JBL Xtreme-3 is three times expensive.) The Motion Boom bass on the same level like JBL-X-3, the mids, and highs are clearer for me. If a JBL has a good app with equalizer, is beat the Motion Boom. A friends of mine got a JBL Xtreme3, I tested it, and the Motion Boom is on the same level by bass!!!! I tought that the reviews on youtube is some kind of joke, thats the Motion Boom beat the JBL Xtreme-3 (by Alan Ross: JBL Xtreme3 vs Soudcore Motion Boom)īut ist not a joke.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |