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Very affordable Bluetooth helmet headset. Not very loud but good easy listening on bikes with factory mufflers. Aftermarket, loud mufflers? Well, that’s another story. You can hear the music, but faintly.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
This unit IS NOT a full com set. Only two units can talk at the same time. The V4 is the into that allows full com. Don't be confused and order this if you are going to use it for refereeing. You would have to keep pushing buttons to switch between people.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
This works great in my HJC helmet. Easy to setup and sounds decent for the price you pay. I have a loud Ducati and I can still hear my music over the roar of the engine and wind. I knocked off a star because it's hard to use with Siri and it's not a 5 star product. It takes a few seconds to get Siri to talk to you and sometimes it gets stuck listening to all the road noise after you're finished talking. That probably an Apple product problem, but it's hard to tell. I wish that I wouldn't have to raise the volume every time I turn it on, but that's not that much of a problem. Microphone works good, some say that I'm too loud. It'd be nice to adjust that volume, too. It takes some time working with the buttons to get the "feel" of it, but once you've got it fingered out, you'll understand.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
I used on a long trip with another rider with me. Works pretty good even with 300 metres distance. The battery goes for at least 2 days full of riding and listening music. One button to talk with other pair and one button to listen music from your phone. Waterproof and good quality...
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
The radio connections between units and between the unit and your phone are rock solid. Battery life is good (full day of use on the motorcycle) and unit recharges in a few hours. However, the user interface is, at best, mysterious. The manual doesn't explain the priorities that the different radio inputs have, nor does it give any kind of state diagram so one can understand the unit's logic for how it decides to make connections. I think I've figured out that if user A presses his "phone" button, he will call the "first" paired unit, called 'B'. Press the "phone" button again, and the connection to B will be broken. When not connected to another "interphone", the unit will pass phone audio (GPS or phone calls). When you call B, the phone audio is suppressed. When you break the connection to B, phone audio is restored. If talking to B, an incoming phone call will override that and A will get the phone call audio. When the call ends, the connection returns to B. If NOT connected to B, but listening to phone GPS audio, an incoming phone call (always auto-answered) audio will be mixed with phone GPS audio. When the phone call ends, phone GPS audio will remain.Read full review
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New