Typical price: £200
What is it: High-end, sound-isolating Bluetooth headphones with iPod adaptor
What we think: They may be very expensive and look ridiculous, but they're the best-sounding Bluetooth headphones we've tested to date
Etymotic ety8 Review
Reviewed on: 11 July 2007
Features
The good news is the Ety8s sound really good and they're comfortable. Similar to Etymotic's wired premium earbuds, they come with various rubber and foam tips you can swap on to the 'buds cylindrical posts until you find one that fits your ear best (the 'buds are connected by a cord you wear loosely around the back of your neck or below your chin). We're more partial to the foam tips, but whether you go with foam or rubber, you're going to get a very good seal that blocks out noise as well as active noise-cancelling headphones such as the Bose Quiet Comfort series.
Etymotic reps warn that since Bluetooth doesn't transmit all that well through your body, you should ideally keep your iPod in a pocket (or armband) on your right side, which ensures a better connection with the Bluetooth receiver in the right earbud. That right earbud is also where you'll find some small buttons that are essentially a basic remote control. You can play and pause tracks, advance tracks forwards and backwards, and raise and lower volume levels. It is worth noting that when you press the buttons a loud clicking sound reverberates in your ear, which is slightly annoying. It pays to remember that the volume control on the right ear bud is the real volume control -- not the one on your iPod. At lower volume levels, the amount of useful bass drops off noticeably.
Performance
Though there isn't much competition in the premium Bluetooth headphones market today, we can say that the ety8s are the best-sounding Bluetooth headphones we've heard to date. Similar to all Bluetooth stereo headphones and many mono mobile phone headsets, these aren't immune to interference and signal dropouts; they also take a few seconds to pair up with your iPod once the dongle is clipped into the player's universal port. It's worth the wait, though -- the sound quality is excellent.
Etymotic says the ety8s sample sound at a 44.1 kHz sampling rate, with 16-bit resolution, and we really didn't feel we lost anything by going wireless, which is rare. The Etymotic ety8s seem as if they have a slightly flatter response than Shure's high-end wired earbuds (the e3c and e5c), which give more emphasis to lower (bass and lower midrange) frequencies, as do most consumer-oriented speakers.
Some some nitpicky listeners, therefore, might find the ety8s slightly bass deficient when compared to a pair of full-range tower speakers or higher-end, over-the-ear headphones. That said, the earphones got a comfortable, if not overpowering, amount of bass, and tonnes of detail in the upper-mid and higher frequencies.
They also do an admirable job of delivering lots of complex musical information -- that is, they don't mush up in the mids. This becomes evident when you have a bunch of instruments playing at the same time, such as in Buena Vista Social Club's hit El Cuarto de Tula -- each of the guitars, the percussion, and the voices retains its individuality and sounds clear while combining, rather than blending unintelligibly, into a cohesive musical unit.
Conclusion
Overall, we really liked the ety8s -- we just weren't so keen on how they looked. If they cost closer to £100 we'd be more forgiving of their unique design, but at £200, you start to get pretty discerning. As it stands, however, if you're an early adopter with high-end tastes, you won't be disappointed by the sound or comfort level of these headphones.
Of course, stereo Bluetooth is still in its early days, so we expect to see even better Bluetooth headphones from Etymotic and others in the not-so-distant future. Whether you want to wait will most likely be tied into how much disposable cash you have to burn.
Editor's note: In our tests, the dongle (and headphones) did not work with the 3G iPod, but they worked fine when tested with more recent models, such as the 4G Photo, nano, and 5G iPod with video.
Edited by Jasmine France
Additional editing by Kate Macefield
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