Altec Lansing inMotion iM4

By Ben Patterson, CNET.com on 04/08/2005

More Conexus reviews , RRP: AU$200.00

The good:

  • Excellent sound
  • Portable music players fit nicely on the rubberised base
  • Retractable minijack cord
  • Speakers tilt at any angle
  • Can be powered with batteries

The bad:

  • No remote control
  • Slightly large and heavy compared with other small speaker sets

The bottomline:

The Altec Lansing iM4 finally delivers the bass we've been craving in small portable speakers, and they're not iPod-centric, so you can use them with any MP3 player.

Buying choices:

Users' rating:

8.5/10

We like big bass when it comes to our tunes, and the Altec Lansing inMotion iM4 finally delivers the low-end sound we've been craving in small portable speakers. While it's slightly larger and heavier than other small speaker sets we've tested, it leaves its predecessors, including the nicely designed but anemic-sounding and expensive iM3, in the dust with its robust, sonic performance. At AU$199.95, the iM4's price is right.

Measuring 260mm by 135mm by 25mm, the folded-up inMotion is roughly the size of a slim hardcover book, and at 794 grams, it's a little heavier than other portable speakers in its class. The twin speakers swing open in a smooth, firm motion, and you can tilt them at any angle, up to 180 degrees from the base. The power switch and the volume slider sit on the curved front section, while behind the base, you'll find an AC input, a minijack port, and a minijack plug on a retractable cable. There isn't a custom dock for an iPod, but our 20GB model sat comfortably atop the rubberised base. You can also plug the iM4 into your laptop with the included minijack-to-minijack cable. All that's missing is a remote control -- a disappointing omission, given that the iM3 comes with a nice, wafer-thin remote that slid right into the assembly.

We were pleasantly surprised by the Altec Lansing inMotion iM4's full-bodied sound. In our experience, fold-up, portable speakers usually can't hack it when it comes to bass (the iM3 comes to mind, actually), but the iM4 delivered rumbling lows and crystal-clear high notes -- impressive, considering the speakers' small size. We dialed up Led Zeppelin's Physical Graffiti, and the iM4 cranked out the thumping bass and soaring strings of Kashmir without skipping a beat, even when we turned up the volume to ear-splitting levels (very nice). The iM4 can also power from four AA batteries for a promised 18 hours of sound.

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fender22
25/10/2006, 06:46 PM

rating
7
/10

Not bad for travelling but sound quality still not 100%

I bought this unit after having the inferior IM3. I liked the dock and remote set up of the IM3 but sound was similar to a portable radio with no bass at all. Apart from that it broke and was unrepairable after only months.
I liked the IM4 for the looks, and the sound was noticeably better even though still lacking bass but I found the dock was a must have for me. Too much hassle having charging leads etc as well as the unit.
Would be great for what it was probably designed for and that's as a travel system, but when I travel I prefer earphones anyway.

Pros: Sleek design, looks great, folds flat / very portable, battery or AC, reasonable sound

Cons: No ipod dock, sound still a bit tinny

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gilbert papazian
31/08/2005, 07:19 PM

Kevin Usheial-Jerkinger
06/08/2005, 09:10 AM

Altec Lansind in Motion iM4= Bad, Bad, Bad,

This product is absolutly horrible i hate it mine broke because i put a CD case on it, i totally agree with the other guy. Cat food would make a better product

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Evan
05/08/2005, 07:30 PM

Correction

I meant M7, not M3. And it looks good.

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04/08/2005, 08:46 PM

it is horrible

ugly, stupid & breaks if drop a feather on it

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Evan
04/08/2005, 07:44 PM

Looks so much better than the stupid M3

I own a creative zen touch - i'd buy one of these if i hadn't already spent nearly $300 on speakers in the last couple/years.

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