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Review on πŸ’¦ Jabees BSport V4.0 Red Bluetooth Sports Headphone: Sweatproof and Waterproof! by Trevor Garrett

Revainrating 3 out of 5

Bad for a musician using in-ear headphones.

I bought these to replace my old Shure E2 in-ear headphones. If you're not familiar, these are in-ear headphones for monitoring musicians. I recently bought a new pair of Shure SE215 in-ear headphones, so I used the old E2 headphones during my workouts. The cable became an issue during development, so I wanted in-ear Bluetooth headphones. I saw them and thought $30 was a good deal. Actually it wasn't. Please note that this review is compared to my actual experiences and preferences with in-ear headphones for musicians. If you have no experience with this, this product could be just what you need. On-ear headphones work if your ears are unusually shaped or the distance from the hole in your ear to the end of your ear is the same size as your ear. Device. If you have normal sized ears, they won't work properly. The cable must come from the other end of the device, not the top, for the on-ear headphones to work properly. Unfortunately they are not designed that way and the tips cannot be attached to the ear in the position shown in the photo. The wire is not flexible enough to be routed forward to overcome the launch of the launch outside of your ear. If you try to rotate the device, they will fall out of your ears. In my opinion this is a design flaw. The earbuds are made of super soft plastic or rubber-like material. They're comfortable, which is a good thing since they won't stay in your ears unless you put them deep in your ear holes. Once they're in, you won't need earplugs (unless you yawn a lot). I am currently training with them in this way and they are very comfortable. The signal on mine sometimes cuts out. I'm pretty sure it's not the MP3s on my phone that are damaged, so they sometimes cut off (every time I've used it), I would have to blame the headphones and not the music source. It's less than an hour of training and it happened every time I used them. Or maybe it's the movement of running. In any case, I'm not sure if the signal is good 99% of the time. The design of the device is good in terms of title ads and phone functionality (haven't used it yet) as well as USB charging but no volume. Controls so you need access to your phone or iPod. That's good in theory, but most practice the strap in their device and don't necessarily have it on hand. If you have access to yours, this shouldn't be a disadvantage. The signal itself is a bit bass-heavy, but that may also be because it got stuck in my ears. Luckily the iPhone has an equalizer setting for iTunes in the settings. Chapter. My experience with Shure monitors shows that the EQ has a flat frequency response, which is why the bass is already heavy compared to them. The accessories are good (except for the functionality of the over-ear headphones). There is a small case on the side to store any leftovers, it is soft but hard enough to protect the headphones in the backpack. Generally they work well most of the time if you put them in your ears. Bass is a bit frequency-heavy, but that can be a quirk in headphones without a monitor. If I had known they could be returned (I just read they are within 30 days which I don't know now) I would have returned them but I figured that was a hygiene reason why I didn't could return. They're still usable, but I'll probably give them to you, my niece or niece, and buy something else.

Pros
  • Easy setup
Cons
  • There are other interesting options.