NOISE-CANCELING technology has long been confined to over-the-ear headphones—a bulky way to mute jackhammers and sirens while enjoying your playlist or trying to work. But the makers of wireless earbuds have now found a way to squeeze the same muffling tech into a smaller, lighter package. Packed with enough battery power to last a few hours (and easily re-juiced in their charging cases), these earbuds, like their bulbous brothers, use microphones to pick up noise, then push soundwaves of the inverse wavelength into your ears. We tested new models for sound quality, noise-cancelling prowess, voice clarity on calls and ease of use.
The Noise Negators
Sony is on a noise-canceling roll with these scaled-down versions of their popular over-ear headsets. They blocked noise most capably out of the models we tested. The WF-1000XM4s’ foam tips helped seal out cacophony, and sat comfortably in our ears for the impressive eight hours the earbuds stayed charged. $280, electronics.sony.com
The Bass Boosters
The Bowers & Wilkins P17s gave our tunes the richest, warmest sound out of the models we tried thanks to their hybrid drivers that work like high-end full size speakers, paired with separate amplifiers. Just don’t venture far without the charging case—the battery only lasts four hours. $400, bowerswilkins.com
The Workout Warriors
The JBL Tour Pro+ TWSs are water-resistant enough to shake off sweat or rain without crackling and dying like lesser rivals. A bit more bulky but comfy, they deliver clear sound with a customizable equalizer in the app, plus grippy silicone wings that keep the buds in your ears during even the most rigorous workout. $200, jbl.com
The Basic Buds
While many earbuds are designed to be controlled a la sensitive touchpads, the vigorously tactile Beats Studio Buds respond to the basic four commands—playback, noise canceling, calling and Siri—with a satisfying click. The sound quality was good, but you’ll likely need to keep your phone handy to adjust the volume. $150, beatsbydre.com
The Ultra Adjustable
While most earbuds offer three tip options for each bud, you’ll find nine packed with the Soundcore Liberty Air 2 Pros, which guarantees a proper fit that blocks out noise while keeping bass in. The app includes a quick hearing test; the results help the buds adjust sound to suit your unique eardrum sensitivity. $129, us.soundcore.com
The Clever Customizers
The app for the Jabra Elite 85t lets you control umpteen factors, from adjusting bass levels to determining which bud handles playback or calling. For quality and consistency when it comes to noise-canceling, they rank just behind Sony’s earbuds, but offer clearer voice calls. From $230, jabra.com
The Wall Street Journal is not compensated by retailers listed in its articles as outlets for products. Listed retailers frequently are not the sole retail outlets.
SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS
Which wireless earbuds have you found to be the most effective at blocking noise? Join the conversation below.
"try" - Google News
August 27, 2021 at 03:11AM
https://ift.tt/3jlD7aa
Want Noise-Canceling Headphones Without the Bulk? Try These Earbud Versions - The Wall Street Journal
"try" - Google News
https://ift.tt/3b52l6K
Shoes Man Tutorial
Pos News Update
Meme Update
Korean Entertainment News
Japan News Update
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Want Noise-Canceling Headphones Without the Bulk? Try These Earbud Versions - The Wall Street Journal"
Post a Comment