This wireless bluetooth speaker works great for listening to music on the go. I sync my iPhone to it and listen to music, stream Pandora, or make phone calls. The sound is pretty good – not real “rich”, but good.
Rating: 4 / 5
the good: i have this paired with my LG Banter (UX265) it has decent mid range sound, looks nice, speaker phone works nice, very loud for something so small, has a little bit of bass but not much, the media control buttons are nice,
the bad: the highs seem really scratchy even at low volume when connecting via blue-tooth (maybe its my phone?) as it dose not do this when using the line in port, range is only about 9 feet
The volume of my HP iPAQ 2410 and also my Palm Treo 650, when used as a GPS navigation system, was
too low to allow hearing voice instructions clearly. Both of my PDA devices have Bluetooth wireless.
My Palm GPS receiver provides location information to the PDAs via Bluetooth. The Motorola EQ5 provides
more than enough audio output to hear route instructions, from “Street Atlas USA Plus 2010″ exports to handheld, very clearly. At the same time, I can be sending stereo music from the PDA to the EQ5. Controls on the EQ5 can be used to control the PDA’s media player.
The EQ5 was also paired with our two Sanyo Katana DLX phones with Bluetooth. The EQ5 can be used to answer
and hangup calls on the Cell Phones by pressing the large button on the top of the EQ5, thereby working as a great
handsfree device. The small size of the EQ5 allows it to be slipped into a shirt pocket or sit in our car’s
flip up dashtop storage compartment, next to the GPS receiver. The EQ5 uses a lithium ion, rechargeable non-replaceable battery with expected life of 500 charges. A 3.5mm Audio port functions as an input port from a music device only (not as a headphone jack).
This wireless bluetooth speaker works great for listening to music on the go. I sync my iPhone to it and listen to music, stream Pandora, or make phone calls. The sound is pretty good – not real “rich”, but good.
Rating: 4 / 5
the good: i have this paired with my LG Banter (UX265) it has decent mid range sound, looks nice, speaker phone works nice, very loud for something so small, has a little bit of bass but not much, the media control buttons are nice,
the bad: the highs seem really scratchy even at low volume when connecting via blue-tooth (maybe its my phone?) as it dose not do this when using the line in port, range is only about 9 feet
Rating: 3 / 5
Motorola EQ5 Portable Wireless Speaker – Portable speakers – USB, Bluetooth
The volume of my HP iPAQ 2410 and also my Palm Treo 650, when used as a GPS navigation system, was
too low to allow hearing voice instructions clearly. Both of my PDA devices have Bluetooth wireless.
My Palm GPS receiver provides location information to the PDAs via Bluetooth. The Motorola EQ5 provides
more than enough audio output to hear route instructions, from “Street Atlas USA Plus 2010″ exports to handheld, very clearly. At the same time, I can be sending stereo music from the PDA to the EQ5. Controls on the EQ5 can be used to control the PDA’s media player.
The EQ5 was also paired with our two Sanyo Katana DLX phones with Bluetooth. The EQ5 can be used to answer
and hangup calls on the Cell Phones by pressing the large button on the top of the EQ5, thereby working as a great
handsfree device. The small size of the EQ5 allows it to be slipped into a shirt pocket or sit in our car’s
flip up dashtop storage compartment, next to the GPS receiver. The EQ5 uses a lithium ion, rechargeable non-replaceable battery with expected life of 500 charges. A 3.5mm Audio port functions as an input port from a music device only (not as a headphone jack).
I love this system.
Rating: 5 / 5