Ever since Jabra started making inroads into the consumer market, from its traditional enterprise space, I’ve been curious. Professional equipment tends to be functional and needs to hold up to rigorous use and deliver performance. I expected the same from Jabra’s consumer products. My initial experience with its older Move Wireless Style edition over-ear headphones was excellent. Simple, functional, performant. But there were no bells and whistles, no ANC, no companion app. I’ve been using several newer Jabra devices over the past year, in and outside the ear.
Jabra Elite 85t: An ANC update to the 75t
I reviewed the 75t last year, and was cautiously optimistic about it and its future. It sounded decent to me, was convenient, the battery lasted well enough, and it had some bells and whistles. Then Jabra announced the 85t with ANC, and back-ported the feature to the 75t through software. Very, very cool, I thought.
The 85t appears to be a basic update to the 75t. The form and function remain the same, save for the included ANC at launch. Form remaining the same was somewhat disappointing to me, as the biggest complaint I had with the 75t was the shape. It just didn’t stay in my ear; particularly the left one. So much so that eventually, I dropped the left bud in the dishwater, killing it. Swapping ear tips did not help. The 85t remains the same, and rarely fits my ears properly. It’s still relatively large as an earbud, and I wouldn’t dare go for a run with them on.
Performance-wise, if there is a difference in the sound of the 75t and 85t, I am unable to hear it. The ‘house sound’ appears to be V-shaped, with decent, clean bass if you get a proper seal, and bright but not sibilant treble. The sound, to me, feels artificial, as if it is being heavily processed by a DSP. Still, not unpleasant, and I have spent many hours listening to music on the 85t (and 75t) without complaint. As long as I wasn’t moving around too much.
The Jabra Elite 85t TWS buds are currently going for Rs 17,999 on Amazon. Image: Tech2/Tushar Burman |
Jabra Elite 3: A new entry-level with better ergonomics
The Jabra Elite 3 TWS buds are priced at Rs 5,999 on Amazon. Image: Tech2/Tushar Burman |
In terms of music performance, I am satisfied with these buds, and would recommend them over the 75t and 85t. At Rs 5,999 on Amazon at the time of writing, they’re far better value. I do not miss the ANC feature. Bass, as I mentioned, feels a tad enhanced, but the treble is bright without being sibilant, and they’re just nice buds to have around for music, ambient or otherwise. The Elite 3 do not support the ‘MySound’ custom EQ feature, but do have some other useful pre-sets. I occasionally used the ‘Bass Boost’ profile, but only briefly. The more I listen to the Elite 3, the more I like them in the Jabra line-up.
In terms of Bluetooth performance, I remain dissatisfied. Even with Bluetooth 5.2, range is par for the course, and equivalent to the flagship models. Stability is not great. I’ve regularly had frustrating drops during calls, where the buds simply disconnect from my phone, and I’m talking to nobody in particular, until I go back to my phone and re-select the buds as the output device. One bud occasionally goes silent, and I have to do some juggling of the case and buds to get it back again. Good luck doing all this while on an important work call. The call quality, however, is good, and I have had no complaints from the other side of the call when it all does work well. I continue to try these as my daily-carry buds.
The Elite 3 skips frills like wireless charging, but gives you the same runtime of seven hours (claimed). The case goes down to 28 hours (claimed), which is still good. The tiny case, better fit and good sound make me pick these up more than the 85t when I need to get going. At Rs 5,999, I am more comfortable recommending these. But then, for a little bit more, you can get the hot-looking Nothing Ear (1) buds with ANC, so Jabra has its work cut out.
Jabra Elite 45h: Good sound, terrible fit
With my pleasant experience with the Move Style Edition behind me, the prospect of reviewing the Elite 45h on-ear headphones excited me. The Move Style Edition were functional and fit great. While there’s no ANC in the 45h, they are part of the ‘Elite’ range, and do connect with the Sound+ app, so I was expecting good things. I was, unfortunately, disappointed, and the 45h headphones lie in a dusty tray with miscellaneous neglected gadgets due to the lack of one thing: fit.
You see, while the materials feel more luxurious than my basic Move Style edition, the ergonomic choices made are baffling. The earcups have this lovely leatherette, which is soft like memory foam and sits lightly on the ears. Way too lightly. The earcups also swivel and articulate a generous amount on the ear, so they can sit on them no matter what your head looks like. But the clamping force is minimal, making the cups feel like they’re on your ears by sheer will power and prayer. The headband too has this nice leatherette, and has a wonderful matte touch to it. Which makes it incredibly slippery. Good luck keeping these on your head. Even turning your head moderately to answer someone will dislodge the 45h from your ears. Turn around quickly, and they will fly off to the ground. It’s ridiculous how badly these headphones fit. Adjusting them involves pulling the headband stalks out; they stay in place with friction. You need to do this when the headphones are off your head, which is another inconvenience.
Controls haven’t been messed with, and these use the same three-button control scheme as the predecessors. A middle button for play/pause and two buttons to skip tracks forward and back. Once your muscle-memory kicks in, these are easy to find on the right earcup, and you don’t need to fiddle with touch controls, which are iffy at best. There’s also a dedicated button to bring up the voice assistant of your choice. Build quality is also a step above the Move Style, and these will fold flat for travel.
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