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Review: Motorola HT820 Bluetooth Stereo Headphones

I can't stand wires and think the world of wireless technology. Any opportunity to eliminate wires is a good opportunity in my mind. Some of the most frustrating wires of all are those on stereo headphones. They become tangled, twisted, knotted, and unless you go a 30' extension they restrict your movement. Then y'all've got the xxx' extension to contend with.

The Motorola HT820 Bluetooth Stereo Headphones ($69.95)are one option to eliminate the headaches associated with wired headphones. You lot become the freedom of movement without the need for miles of extension cords and no more than tangled, knotted wires. Oh and as an added bonus, these headphones can double every bit a wireless headset for your phone besides.

Read on for the full review!

Out of the Box

The HT820 comes packaged with a soft pouch, sound cable, and charger. The headphones are the "over the back of the caput" style. The earpieces are big, solidly congenital while the frame is lightweight. The frames flexibility makes the headphones experience a picayune flimsy.

One drawback of the design is that the headphones are not adjustable. You lot tin can adjust the fit a footling by adjusting the angle of the frame but some manner of adjusting the size of the frame would be overnice.

The earpieces are well made and are cushioned to add to the comfort. Each earpiece has a large, center control button and 2 buttons on top of the earpiece. The left earpiece controls power, phone functions, and volume. The correct earpiece controls music pause and skip frontward/backward functions (device/plan dependant).

Each center command button has Motorola's trademark "M" that lights upward to indicate/ostend functions as well as to let the user the headphones are active. The light is vivid enough that at night, aircraft passing overhead will be able to tell if the headphones are agile. Fortunately, yous can disable these lights.

The unit comes with an audio cable that will allow the headphones to work with non-Bluetooth enabled devices.

Operation

Stereo Headphones

Pairing the HT820 with your phone was no more than hard than any other Bluetooth device. Information technology took me no fourth dimension to pair the headphones with my Samsung BlackJack 2 and I was enjoying my favorite Jimmy Buffet tunes without wires.

Audio quality through the headphones was good. The headphones seem to rely more on the host devices volume than its internal book. When I maxed out the volume on the headphones I withal had room to get past increasing the volume on my BlackJack II.

While I enjoyed pairing the HT820 with my BlackJack Two, I also enjoyed listening to music off my laptop. Pairing the HT820 with my Dell Inspiron E1505 was almost as easy as pairing it with the phone. The challenge was to tweak the internal settings of the laptop so the audio was transmitted through the headphones instead of the internal speakers.

The reported range of these headphones is approximately 10 meters. I won't argue with that. While listening to music on my laptop, I set my figurer down to get upstairs to bank check on something. Not paying attending, I even so had the headphones on and was able to listen to the music with no difficulty upstairs.

Telephone Headset

As mentioned, the HT820 doubles as a wireless headset for your phone. Sound quality was expert and it took a trivial getting used to hearing callers in stereo. The microphone picked up my voice using a normal tone and volume. There was a trivial crackling detected by those I called but nothing bad enough to interfere with the call. As my wife described it, "I could hear y'all fine but the crackling was a fiddling distracting."

The headphones have basic phone operations such as answering/ending calls, vocalism dialing, redialing final number, and ignoring calls. Some features are phone dependant.

Battery life for the HT820 is reported at 14 hours of music listening, 17 hours of talk time and 500 hours of standby time. After using these headphones extensively during the review, I'll agree with Motorola'due south cess.

Overall Impression

The HT820 is a solid prepare of headphones. Sound quality is good, connectivity is expert and the headphones can double as a wireless headset for your phone. The only concern I have over these headphones is the lack of adaptability. While they fit me comfortably, my son had problems getting them to fit but right.

If you are similar me and are seeking to reduce the number of wired devices yous accept in your life, the Motorola HT820 Bluetooth Stereo Headphones are worth considering.

Source: https://www.windowscentral.com/review-motorola-ht820-bluetooth-stereo-headphones

Posted by: bransonhisherecur.blogspot.com

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