With more and more phones dropping the headphone socket and more and more cameras enforcing driving and talking on the phone as illegal its becoming necessary to really look at the landscape of Bluetooth (BT) headsets and ear buds. Personally I like Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) buds because they
As you may know I've got a few sets of BT buds (Bose Generation 1 and SkullCandy INDY ANC buds). Recently I read of the PineBuds Pro and was impressed with their specifications and also intrigued by the fact that they were programmable too.
Their site boasts of the following (more as I've selected only those of interest:
- User can flash in PINE64 community open firmware when becomes available. The community firmware may beyond typical TWS earbuds functionality.
- A custom design 6mm small size transducer packs high output and strong bass performance despite its compact size and can outperform typical 10mm transducers. (LOL and the other one plays jingle bells)
- Dual mic voice beam foaming, echo cancellation, and environment noise cancellation (ENC).
SPECIFICATIONS:
6 microphones Hybrid Adaptive ANC technology, effectively block out background noise up to 45dB
Frequency Response (Output): 20Hz-20KHz
Noise Reduction:
- -45dB attenuation nominal 50-200Hz
- -55dB max attenuation @150Hz
The key point is the price under US$70 (plus postage). How could I resist?
Please see the section on bugs
Sounded too good to be true for the money, unsurprisingly I found that it indeed did not live up to the claims. However I thought I'd give them a good looking at here and compare to my Bose QC Buds (first generation) which makes less substantial ANC claims. So lets have a look at what you get
So, the PineBuds are clearly much smaller (which brings disadvantages I'll come back to) and the case has a slider lid not a flip lid. Both have magnets to help lock them into the charging points but the Pine case is much easier to open (even if the buds are harder to pull out with your fingers.
Unlike the Bose you can leave the lid open because they don't "turn on" until you remove them from the case. Further you can actually turn them off (or if they loose bluetooth they'll turn off automatically after 5 minutes). This is itself a great advantage over the Bose which if left alone will run till the battery is down and if that condition lasts too long (say, a few weeks) you may find that the Bose won't re-charge.
That's covered under warranty, but why have them gone for a few weeks?
Looking closer we can see the size difference more clearly
and the part which fits into your ear is quite different (because they both have a different strategy of fitting).
Both buds have a different strategy for touch input, and I'd expected when reading the documentation that these would be more like the SkullCandy INDY ANC buds (which I prefer the operation of) than the Bose. Turned out this assumption was wrong (but may be programmable to how I want it).
This results in a more subtle ear presence, but not as much as you may like to imagine
What isn't perhaps obvious is the difference that this makes in terms of actually touching the right part of the earbud when giving it your request (you know, answer that call, turn the volume up/down, change track, change ANC levels ...). This has meant that I get a lot more mis-touch operations when using the PineBuds than I do with the Bose.
While the "granularity" of volume adjustments was better on the PineBuds the mistouch events pissed me off more than the steps clearly audible as being a bit too much on the Bose. Using the Bose App solves this problem but when you're driving or doing something else on the phone do you really want to go through the app for every fucking thing?
At this point its worth saying "I'm not leaving my Bose Buds for this product".
Audio quality
This is of course subjective, but having used buds, over ear, on ear and whatnot in listening (even professionally) for some dozens of years I can say that the PineBuds are sufficient but they are not in the same league as the Bose, when it comes to accuracy and clarity or even depth of bass (no I don't mean just cranked up artificial bass).
Worse, in phone calls strange digital processing artifacts occur from time to time. This results in strange "independence" of the voice in each ear (probably caused by brief failure of comb filters) or even some vocal distortion (not unlike clipping) to be briefly heard.
When no music is playing background low level noise can be heard. Note, this is not typical white (or pink) noise but is more consistent with little bits of binary chatter in the background. Perhaps some bleed from the small CPU system?
Overall I'd rate audio as a 6 or 7 out of 10 (and the Bose a solid 9.5 out of 10)
NOTE: for some people an important point will be that they can be used independently. That's right, if you like being able to use one bud in one ear then these allow this. Better it can be either bud, which is helpful if you drive on the left side or the right side of the vehicle as you can pick which one fits what you want to achieve. Say have the window down but still make calls by putting the "inside ear" in, or if you have a passenger and want to make calls putting the earbud in the opposite ear to the passenger.
ANC levels
- ambient mode: again another change in curve for music reproduction (bass sounds a bit wooly) doesn't really seem to pass much through
- ANC off: best audio of them all and basically behaves like nice BT buds (no noise)
- standard ANC: fridge motor sounds fade into the background (subtle change in music playback curve)
- Super ANC (not so subtle but not offensive different change in curve deepness of bass disappears)
Ear fit (and the silicone tips)
what I think about ANC?
Summary
- on a budget
- interested in modding the software
- like the features such as powering off each bud
Annoyances
- tap registration is patchy, made worse by the small active area on what are small buds to begin with
- a double edged sword is that "Volume Down" is a very small increment (which I like) but requires a few presses to activate. So if you have "volume blasting in your ear" you end up not being able to turn them down fast without doing all sorts of other things (like pausing or hanging up)
Bugs
- bluetooth driver bug: When playing music using my default music player, putting my phone in my pocket pauses the music (no other BT device I have causes this)
- occasionally fails to pass through phone calls (or indeed anything). At this time they show connected, the phone shows its connected but nothing. Turn off bluetooth and turn back on again to fix.
- bluetooth range is crappy, even in my own kitchen (especially when power is not 100%)
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