iPad&iPhone user

Review: Tribit XFree Go

- Jon L. Jacobi

Price: £29 from fave.co/3kFa7Js

Before I discovered the price of Tribit’s XFree Go headphones, which wasn’t provided until weeks after the product showed up, I was thinking they’d retail for £100 – or maybe £80 given Tribit’s penchant for low-ball pricing. In my book, they sound every bit as good as the Sony set I use on a regular basis.

Discoverin­g that they were selling on Amazon for just £29 was shocking.

I’ve never heard a worthwhile headset priced less than £50, let alone one that sounds as good as this. But then I started watching movies.

A SHOWSTOPPE­R OF A FLAW

I quickly discovered a major problem: the XFree Go became unresponsi­ve after a relatively short period of sustained use. They’d still produce sound, as long as the Bluetooth

connection remained, but I couldn’t adjust the volume or even turn them off. There was no indicator LED, nothing.

The only way I could unfreeze them was to plug them back into an AC outlet and wait. I don’t know if every XFree Go suffers this glitch or if a new production run will fix the problem. Thinking I just got a defective unit, I had the company ship me a replacemen­t – which suffered from the very same problem. That tells me the issue could be common or even universal. I’ll revise my verdict if Tribit can send me a pair that doesn’t exhibit the flaw; but for now, buyer beware.

DESIGN

The set I tested were black with painted silver highlights. Painted typically means cheap-looking, but that’s not the case here. The XFree Go won’t woo audiophile­s or followers of fashion, but their appearance certainly belies the price.

That said, I do have one minor complaint about the design: The flexible metal band didn’t seem to have quite the circumfere­nce to span my not particular­ly large, but not particular­ly small melon. The top and ear pads are comfortabl­e, but the overall fit seems just a bit tight. This will likely improve with use as the hardware gets broken in.

Surprising­ly – again, because of the price – the Tribit XFree Go uses Qualcomm’s latest Bluetooth 5.0 chipset. There’s a Micro-USB port for charging, as well as multi-function

buttons for power/pairing/answer/ hang up, volume-up/next-track and volume down/previous-track. Other functions, such as invoking Siri and clearing pairings, are accomplish­ed with different combinatio­ns of buttons and the length of time said buttons are held down.

As you might have divined from the descriptio­n above, the XFree Go can be used for phone calls. There’s a mic above the status light for just such occasions. Tribit ships the XFree Go with a handy carrying case, a USB charging cable, and a 3.5mm-to3.5mm cable for wired use.

Sound, comfort, and run time

I’m picky about sound; as a former starving musician, however, I’m not stupid about it either. Stylish packaging (Tribit’s is pretty okay) and velvet carry bags mean little to me. In this case I was fooled by the lack of brand-name recognitio­n and price; and man, did my eyebrows go up when I played the first song on the XFree Go. I simply was not expecting what I heard, even at my imagined £100 price tag. The audio bods at Tribit know their stuff.

What all that means is that I found none of the tinny, frequency-challenged nonsense you get from most low-end headphones. Instead, I heard decently defined mid-range, some actual top-end, and most excellentl­y tuned bass. The low frequencie­s don’t tread in Sony Extra Bass territory – which is basically like having subwoofer – but they’re certainly thumpy enough for the vast majority of musicalrep­roduction scenarios.

I put the XFree Go’s through the usual melange of musical styles, from classical, to rock, to electronic dance music, to rap/ hip-hop. It passed muster on all counts, though as I said, if

you’re looking for subwoofer-like bass, you won’t find it here.

With low-latency Bluetooth onboard, the XFree Go are perfectly fine for watching movies without dialogue lag. I did quite a bit of that and discovered that while this headset doesn’t feel super comfortabl­e at first blush, there was no long-term irritation. I went through a couple of flicks without it bothering me. As I said, they still produce sound even after the controls lock up.

Runtime for the 400mAh battery was about as advertised, and you can get at least a movie’s worth from a quick charge (Tribit claims four hours after only 10 minutes on the AC – about as long as it takes for you to get up and make more popcorn.

VERDICT

If not for the lock-up issue, I would give Tribit more love for shipping such good-quality audio gear for such low prices. Here’s hoping the ultra-low price tag in this case isn’t simply a case of the company dumping defective inventory

All that aside, I would have awarded the XFree Go at least twice as many stars if not for the control-freeze problem. And to be fair, the XFree Go are perfectly usable in many situations despite that bug. Still, as tempting as the price is, I can’t recommend a product that has controls that freeze up. And that’s a drag. They really do sound great.

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 ??  ?? I don’t know how big this model’s head is, but I found the Tribit XFree Go to be a tight fit.
I don’t know how big this model’s head is, but I found the Tribit XFree Go to be a tight fit.
 ??  ?? Tribit’s XFree Go’s are decently comfortabl­e, but seem designed for smaller heads than the author’s.
Tribit’s XFree Go’s are decently comfortabl­e, but seem designed for smaller heads than the author’s.
 ??  ?? The Tribit XFree Go come with a handy carrying case.
The Tribit XFree Go come with a handy carrying case.

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