The headphones left a favorable first impression immediately after the transaction was completed. The headphones have a pleasant sound, they are comfortable to wear, and they perform all of the features that were advertised successfully (the main thing is to insert them correctly). While the current volume is nearly at capacity, I believe that there is room for improvement in the volume margin. But, there are a few things I would change about the transaction overall. I made the decision to evaluate the self-sufficiency of the headphones, and I was really dissatisfied to find that they could not even display the number of operating hours that were advertised by the manufacturer. At a loudness of fifty percent and using the AAC codec, the headphones barely made it to five hours, however the honor phone lasted between seven and eight. I made multiple attempts to measure, but each time I got the same result. Case could lose 7-8% per day. And this is where the difficulty lies: if the newly released headphones are unable to demonstrate the autonomy that was advertised for them, then after some time of usage they will begin to discharge even more quickly, and they will unquestionably be overlooked. Unfortuitously, this is not the only issue that has been raised with the headphones. Recent testing has shown that the right earpiece has a significantly higher rate of discharge than the left one (see screenshot). I'm not entirely sure where I saw it, but somewhere in the responses to this claim there was an official response from Huawei stating that the headphones have a function that automatically changes the role of the main earpiece and controls that the discharge is uniform. This was stated in response to the claim that the headphones had a function that automatically changed the role of the main earpiece That truly is and it even works initially, but in the end I saw a difference of 39%, despite the fact that both sets of headphones were worn from the moment they were completely charged until they ran out of power. In this instance, the style of usage was, of course, a little bit more serious. The headphones had a sound transmission mode that functioned for an hour, and with that mode turned off, they still had enough power for three hours of music played at 70% level. In addition, the right earpiece fell totally, whereas just forty percent of it remained on the left. In the direction of the headphones, I rounded the time off. The discharge difference is 15% when the device is being used normally (at 50% volume and with no noise reduction). Because of this, the headphones will not let you down if you only use them for a limited amount of time; however, if you intend to use them frequently and for an extended period of time, then you should heed my warning; however, it's possible that I just got married, and this is an unusual circumstance. It is not something I would recommend doing if you paid their full fee.
🎧 HUAWEI Freebuds 4i: Wireless Earbuds with Active Noise Cancelling & 10H Battery Life in Black
279 Review
Black Huawei FreeBuds 3 Wireless Bluetooth Earbuds for Superior Sound
276 Review
Headphones Sennheiser CX 300-II, black
318 Review
Apple AirPods Pro RU wireless headphones, white
258 Review
🎧 Experience Unmatched Audio Quality with Marshall Major 4 Bluetooth Headphones
104 Review
Black Panasonic RP-HJE125E-K Wired Earphones 🎧 with 3.5 mm Jack
359 Review
Massdrop x Koss Porta Pro X On-Ear Headphones: 🎧 Noise-Cancelling Mic, Voice Assistant, Track Skip | Collapsible Midnight Blue
314 Review
New White Marshall Minor II In-Ear Bluetooth Headphone
101 Review