The Guardian Australia

Sonos Roam review: the portable speaker you’ll want to use at home too

- Samuel Gibbs Consumer technology editor

Sonos’s new smaller and cheaper Roam portable speaker is one that won’t end up relegated to a drawer collecting dust as it sounds great at home too.

The £159 Roam joins the much bigger and heavier £399 Move as the second of firm’s battery-powered models and proves itself as one of the best options in a saturated market.

The speaker has both wifi and Bluetooth and is triangular in shape, like a Toblerone, but only about the length of a 500ml bottle. It weighs 430g so won’t drag down a bag and is easy to grip for carrying about the house.

The front is a metal mesh, the back is high-quality mat plastic and the end caps are rubber to help absorb impacts if you drop it. The speaker is water resistant and can be submerged in up to 1m of water for 30 minutes, so it is durable enough to survive most outdoor settings. It doesn’t float though, so don’t drop it in a pool.

It’s a really good design that’s both functional and attractive looking the part in the home as well as outdoors. Specificat­ions

Dimensions: 168 x 62 x 60mm Weigh: 430g

Connectivi­ty: Wifi 5 (ac), Bluetooth 5, AirPlay 2, Spotify Connect

Battery: 10 hours playback, 10 days standby

Charging: USB-C (up to 15W; 5V/1.5A or higher), Qi wireless

Water resistance: IP67 (1m depths for 30 mins)

Setup and features

You must set up the Roam on wifi using the Sonos app before you can use it as a Bluetooth speaker, but it only takes a couple of minutes. The Sonos app acts as a controller for playing music from practicall­y every music streaming service available via wifi. The speaker can also be controlled straight from the Spotify app or using AirPlay 2 on Apple devices. To use it outdoors you simply pair it with your phone via Bluetooth like a regular portable speaker.

The Roam has a few tricks up its sleeve if you have other Sonos speakers. It can share music being streamed to it via Bluetooth with other speakers on your home wifi network. But it can also create an instant group with your nearest Sonos speakers or transfer music to or from them just by holding the play/pause button on the Roam. It works like magic.

The Roam also supports voice assistants from Google and Amazon’s Alexa, allowing you to swap between them. It has three mics built into it and

works just like one of Google’s Nest or Amazon’s Echo speakers on wifi, answering questions, streaming and controllin­g music. They need an internet connection to operate so don’t work on Bluetooth.

Great sound

The Roam lives up to Sonos’s reputation for quality sound. Its audio performanc­e punches way beyond its weight and size, producing some of the clearest, crispest and most well-balanced audio even at high volumes that I’ve heard from a portable speaker.

It doesn’t have really thumping bass, and while it is certainly loud enough for personal listening or in small groups – anything louder than 30% while on a table in front of you is really more than enough – it isn’t up to smashing out the beats for a large outdoor party. But its separate mid and tweeter speakers give a real vibrancy and depth to music that is often poorly reproduced on competitor­s of this size. It will handle anything from high-energy electronic­a to a string quartet with aplomb.

The Roam also has Trueplay,the system which tunes the speaker automatica­lly, adjusting for orientatio­n, environmen­t and obstacles. Still, I think it sounded slightly better when stood on its end than when laid horizontal­ly. You can also adjust the treble, bass and “loudness” in the Sonos app and create stereo pairs with two Roams while on wifi, but not Bluetooth.

10-hour battery life

The Roam lasts for about 10 hours of playback on battery on wifi or Bluetooth, which is a bit short of key Bluetooth speaker competitio­n but more than enough for a day’s music in the park or around the house. You can see battery life in the Sonos app on wifi or ask the voice assistant, but there’s no way to see it on Bluetooth other than a blinking LED when the battery is low.

The speaker ships with a USB-A to USB-C cable, but no charger, requiring a 5V/1.5A (7.5W) or greater power adaptor, which should be most smartphone chargers. It takes more than two hours to charge with a basic adaptor or faster with a more powerful 15W one.

It can also be charged via Qi wireless charging in more like four hours. Sonos sells an optional £44 wireless charger that magnetical­ly attaches to the base of the speaker, but any Qi-compatible charger should do it. The speaker can be used while charging.

Sustainabi­lity

Sonos rates the battery in the Roam for 900 full-charge cycles before a significan­t drop in performanc­e, which is says equates to about three years of use. The battery is not user-replaceabl­e, but the company will offer a factory replacemen­t service similar to most smartphone­s.

The company commits to a minimum of five years of software support for feature updates after it stops selling a product, but has a track record of much longer including bug and security fixes for its legacy products.

Sonos did not comment on the use of recycled material in the Roam, but offers trade-in and product recycling, and publishes annual responsibi­lity and sustainabi­lity reports. Observatio­ns

Unlike other Sonos speakers, Roam cannot be paired with a sub or used as surrounds in a home cinema setup.

There is currently a battery-drain bug with the Google Assistant integratio­n for which Sonos is working on a fix, but in the meantime it suggests turning the speaker fully off after use, turning off Assistant or switching to Alexa.

Trueplay only works when the mic is not muted.

Price

The Sonos Roam costs £159 on its own or £203 bundled with a wireless charger and ships from 30 April.

For comparison, the UE Boom 3 costs £129.99, the UE Megaboom costs £149.99 and the JBL Charge 5 costs £159.99.

Verdict

The Roam is easily one of the best portable speakers and, unlike the majority of the competitio­n, it works even better indoors.

It isn’t the biggest or the loudest and doesn’t have thumping bass or superlong battery life. But the Roam produces quality, well-rounded sound with a clarity unmatched by rivals. Outdoors it functions just like any rugged, water-resistant Bluetooth speaker. Inside it works like Sonos’s other excellent wifi speakers, compatible with practicall­y every music service available and with a choice of voice assistants too. It even looks great as a sleek piece of premium electronic­s, and like other Sonos speakers will be supported for a very long time.

For existing Sonos users after a portable speaker, the Roam is a nobrainer. For others what you get is far more than a simple Bluetooth speaker for much the same price as top competitor­s. For many it might be the only personal music speaker you need. Other reviews

Sonos Move review: brilliant sound now battery-powered

Sonos Arc review: this soundbar sounds simply fantastic

Sonos One review: the best smart speaker for audiophile­s

Amazon Echo 2020 review: the bestsoundi­ng smart speaker under £100

Google Nest Audio review: smart speaker gets music upgrade

HomePod mini review: Apple’s smaller and cheaper smart speaker

 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? The Sonos Roam looks and sounds great both indoors and out with wifi and Bluetooth, water resistance and a 10-hour battery.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian The Sonos Roam looks and sounds great both indoors and out with wifi and Bluetooth, water resistance and a 10-hour battery.
 ??  ?? The Roam can stand upright on its end or lay down with little silicon feet on one side to keep it from vibrating against a table. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian
The Roam can stand upright on its end or lay down with little silicon feet on one side to keep it from vibrating against a table. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian

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