Logitech Wireless Headphones for iPod

By Nathaniel Wilkins, CNET.com on 28/06/2005

More Logitech reviews , RRP: AU$250.00

The good:

  • Bluetooth wireless headphones for iPod
  • Integrated iPod controls
  • Internal, rechargeable batteries
  • Better sound than stock iPod earbuds
  • Surprisingly comfortable and light

The bad:

  • Rechargeable batteries not removable
  • Basic battery-status indicator
  • Not adjustable, so won't fit everyone
  • For iPod only

The bottomline:

The innovative, Bluetooth-enabled Logitech Wireless Headphones for the iPod are a worthy upgrade for virtually any iPod owner.

Users' rating:

6.5/10

Although it's anybody's guess whether Apple will release an iPod with integrated Bluetooth wireless capabilities, Logitech has stepped up to the plate with its Wireless Headphones for the iPod, the first set of Bluetooth headphones for Apple's MP3 player. The well-designed product includes white neckband-style headphones with foam-covered ear pads and built-in controls, a low-profile Bluetooth 1.2 wireless transmitter (measuring 32mm by 64mm by 19mm) that attaches to any dockable iPod, and a charger cable. The transmission range of up to 10 metres lets you conveniently stash your iPod in a bag or a purse, for instance, while listening untethered.

At just 90 grams, the surprisingly light headset was comfortable throughout mostly sedentary, multihour listening sessions and didn't dislodge once during a 40-minute jog. Although you wouldn't want to regularly run while holding the bulky iPod, the wireless capability lets you stash it in a treadmill's accessory holder or even leave it in a nearby gym bag during your workout. The headset is appropriately easy to operate without requiring you to look at its controls. The outside of the right earpiece hosts four keys (volume up, volume down, next track, and previous track) that are intuitively arrayed around a large, circular play/pause button, and the volume controls have slight indents so that you can distinguish them by feel from the track-skip keys.

Rechargeable lithium-ion batteries power the headphones and the transmitter, so you don't have to worry about any drain on your iPod's battery. The charger cable splits into two plugs to simultaneously accomodate both components. Because the device's battery life is rated at up to 8 hours, the 'phones nonremovable cells are likely to require more frequent recharging than your iPod. That said, in informal testing, we got nearly 9 hours of continuous playback from new, fully charged batteries. A status LED located on the play/pause button blinks red when the headphones' cell runs low, but it's less useful than mobile phone-style battery-status bars would be. The batteries fully recharge in around 2.5 hours.

In addition to being a cool iPod accessory, the Logitech Wireless Headphones for the iPod also delivers solid sonic performance. The 'phones sound markedly bigger, smoother, and more detailed than most portable audio headphones, including the stock earbuds supplied with our iPod Photo 60GB. Although the Logitechs weren't able to play quite as loud as the stock iPod 'buds, sufficient volume was always available. Midrange and treble-intensive sounds, such as vocals in Björk's track Headphones, sounded pleasantly velvety, while bass lines had competitive presence, thanks in part to the 'phones relatively large 40mm drivers and fairly deep-reaching 20Hz-to-20KHz rated frequency response. When we roamed more than 5 to 10 metres from the iPod with the headphones, playback dropouts were a problem, but aside from Bluetooth range limitations, transmission was for the most part seamless.

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Kappage
13/12/2007, 06:11 PM

rating
3
/10

Great sound quality usability WAS great But since after a month of use the battery wont charge, and their has also been a recall on this product in AMERICA ONLY, i wouldn't buy another or recommend anyone too.

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Geoff Taylor
11/10/2006, 06:28 PM

rating
3
/10

Convenient, expensive, but broke with normal use.

I have used this product now for less than a year.
I find that now, they are useless.

The plastic head (neck?) band is far too vunerable to damage. The weight of the earpieces is enough to cause the headband to deform almost to its limit. The slightest mis-handling in normal use will cause the headband to snap. I had to add a light metal headband from an 'inferior' el cheapo headset held on with small sprky ties to stabilise mine once it had snapped.
Secondly, the charging socket on the headphones has now gobe faulty. The 'phones will not now charge at all. As you plug them in, the changing LED flashes orange once then nothing happens.

Pros: Sound quality - excellent.
Convenience - excellent.
Charge life - good (Before going faulty)

Cons: With careful normal light use...

The headband broke.
The charging socket broke.

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12/09/2005, 11:03 PM

ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC!!!

Highly recomended, fantastic quality, works better than stats advise, highly worth the investment!

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Judy
09/09/2005, 09:45 PM

Awesome!

Can't be this one at the gym, cordless is the way to go...

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Ross
08/09/2005, 09:06 AM

value for money?

Whilst generally it a quality product(except for the battery indicator which could be better), at $250.00. I question whether it was truely value for money.

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Brad
06/09/2005, 06:55 PM

About Time!!

I can't find any tech specs anywhere online. Harris Tech are selling them $189

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