What Hi-Fi (UK)

Wireless speakers

It’s great to be able to play your music when out and about – but a Bluetooth speaker really shows its worth when it sounds terrific at home as well. These four hit the sweet spot…

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Audio Pro Addon T3 £150

FOR Full sound; good balance; expressive and dynamic; build

What do we see here? Round eyes, big black nose? A koala. What we feel, however, is a product with build quality belying its £150 tag. The Addon T3 isn’t a handbag-friendly bar, but that helps it feel like a more serious piece of kit.

It’s still portable though, robust, rather than heavy. The handle is a canny touch and battery life is up to 30 hours at half volume or 12 at full blast. But does the sound justify the extra bulk?

Everything about this speaker so far suggests we’ll be impressed, yet we’ve heard too many wireless speakers in this price bracket to request the Earth. So when we hear Bauhaus’s Bela Lugosi’s

Dead, we are pleasantly surprised. In the drum kit – the unmistakea­ble kick, hi-hat and snare-rim rhythm with which the piece starts – you hear the size of the room immediatel­y, giving it a more complex and natural feel than you may have imagined possible in this field, and that texture remains unconfused as it is treated with delay.

As the song grows, first with bass and then with guitar, you notice not only the depth of the frequency range, but its agility and respect for its surroundin­gs. The low end made feasible by that larger chassis doesn’t dominate the balance – instead it does just what it should, offering stability when the vocals begin.

A worthwhile upgrade

And that is where the upgrade on something such as the Ultimate Ears Roll – a humdinger at £100 – is justified. Sure, the Addon T3 is equally ideal for the garden or poolside, but you’ll be sufficient­ly engaged by its level of expression to listen for longer periods.

This isn’t going to replace your hi-fi system, but it is comfortabl­e and more communicat­ive and absorbing than being merely a vessel for background music at a teddy-bear’s picnic. Rachmanino­v’s Concerto No2 In C

Minor will lack its usual gravitas on any sub-£250 wireless speaker, but the T3 stays within its comfort zone. And that is not meant negatively – it doesn’t overstretc­h itself and focuses on what it does well, making instrument­s sound as wholesome as possible without sacrificin­g organisati­on or range. It is more than listenable, and we get through all three movements – longer than half an hour – without fidgeting.

If it can play that, it can play anything. And it does; from Beastie Boys’

Intergalac­tic to Prince Fatty and Horseman’s take on Insane In The Brain, that level of expression makes fun, well, fun. It’s bouncy, full of attack and not slowed at all by the extra bass weight.

There’s an auxiliary input for your telly/ipod/record player, and a USB port to charge your phone.

We’re unable to fault Audio Pro on this one. You’ll need to spend more if you want something to fit in your pencil case and sound this good, though we’re pretty confident you’ll choose to take the T3 with you when you hear what £150 can buy. Splendid.

 ??  ?? Impressive tone The T3 is portable, but that extra bulk adds a musicality many smaller speakers simply cannot match
Impressive tone The T3 is portable, but that extra bulk adds a musicality many smaller speakers simply cannot match
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