Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphone: Đối thủ đáng gờm của Sony đã xuất hiện!
Trong thế giới của những chiếc tai nghe cao cấp, sự cạnh tranh luôn khốc liệt. Và mới đây, Bose đã chính thức tung ra sản phẩm mới mang tên QuietComfort Ultra Headphone, khiến Sony phải dè chừng. Với những cải tiến vượt trội về công nghệ âm thanh và thiết kế, chiếc tai nghe này hứa hẹn sẽ là “kẻ thay đổi cuộc chơi” trong thị trường audio cao cấp.
### Thiết kế tinh tế, chất liệu cao cấp
Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphone sở hữu thiết kế hiện đại, tối giản nhưng không kém phần sang trọng. Với chất liệu nhẹ và bền, chiếc tai nghe này mang lại cảm giác thoải mái khi đeo trong thời gian dài. Đệm tai được làm từ da mềm mại, giúp cách âm tốt và tạo cảm giác êm ái cho người dùng.
### Công nghệ âm thanh đỉnh cao
Bose luôn được biết đến với khả năng tái tạo âm thanh chân thực, và QuietComfort Ultra không phải ngoại lệ. Chiếc tai nghe này được trang bị công nghệ Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) thế hệ mới, giúp loại bỏ hoàn toàn tiếng ồn bên ngoài. Dù bạn đang ở trong một quán cà phê đông đúc hay trên chuyến bay dài, QuietComfort Ultra sẽ mang đến không gian âm nhạc riêng tư và tinh khiết.
Âm bass sâu, mid rõ ràng và treble sáng tạo nên trải nghiệm nghe nhạc sống động. Đặc biệt, công nghệ Adaptive EQ tự động điều chỉnh âm thanh dựa trên môi trường xung quanh, đảm bảo bạn luôn được tận hưởng chất lượng âm thanh tốt nhất.
### Kết nối đa dạng, thời lượng pin ấn tượng
QuietComfort Ultra hỗ trợ kết nối Bluetooth 5.0, cho phép kết nối nhanh chóng và ổn định với các thiết bị thông minh. Thời lượng pin lên đến 20 giờ sử dụng liên tục, đủ để bạn thưởng thức âm nhạc cả ngày dài. Ngoài ra, tính năng sạc nhanh chỉ cần 15 phút để có thêm 2.5 giờ sử dụng, rất tiện lợi cho những người bận rộn.
### Đối thủ đáng gờm của Sony
Sony vốn là thương hiệu dẫn đầu trong phân khúc tai nghe cao cấp với dòng WH-1000XM4 và XM5. Tuy nhiên, với sự ra mắt của Bose QuietComfort Ultra, Sony đang đối mặt với một đối thủ đáng gờm. Cả hai thương hiệu đều có những ưu điểm riêng, nhưng QuietComfort Ultra nổi bật với khả năng cách âm vượt trội và thiết kế tinh tế.
### Mua ngay tại QUEEN MOBILE
Nếu bạn đang tìm kiếm một chiếc tai nghe cao cấp với chất lượng âm thanh đỉnh cao và thiết kế sang trọng, Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphone chính là sự lựa chọn hoàn hảo. Hãy đến với QUEEN MOBILE – địa chỉ uy tín hàng đầu tại Việt Nam chuyên cung cấp các sản phẩm công nghệ chính hãng. Với chính sách bảo hành lâu dài và dịch vụ chăm sóc khách hàng tận tâm, QUEEN MOBILE cam kết mang đến trải nghiệm mua sắm tốt nhất cho bạn.
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Giới thiệu Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones Review: Sony Has Serious Competition
: Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones Review: Sony Has Serious Competition
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9.2
Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones
Like
- Lightweight and very comfortable
- New design is an upgrade
- Excellent sound
- Great noise canceling
- New Immersive Audio with head-tracking offers some sound-quality enhancements
- Voice-calling performance is top-notch
Don’t like
- Higher price tag
- No USB-C audio
- Immersive audio mode hurts battery life
Back in 2015, Bose released a set of wired earbuds called the SoundTrue Ultra Earbuds that were among my favorite sounding Bose products. They were discontinued a few years ago, but Bose has brought back the Ultra name for its new flagship ($299) and Quiet Comfort Ultra Headphones, which I’m reviewing here. At $429 (£450, AU$649), the latter are Bose’s most expensive headphones to date.
Watch this: Bose QC Ultra Headphones Review: Superior to Sony?
09:40
Testing the noise canceling on the streets of New York.
While the QC Ultra Earbuds still lack multipoint Bluetooth pairing — Bose is still working on adding that feature — which allows you to connect to two devices simultaneously and switch audio between them, both the QC Ultra Headphones and QC Headphones have it. I was able to switch back and forth between the audio on an iPhone 14 Pro and an Android device without any issue. The headphones will also pair with your computer, but computer Bluetooth audio can be more finicky, especially with older Windows PCs and Macs.
The QC Ultra Headphones and QC Ultra Earbuds are equipped with Bluetooth 5.3, while the new QC Headphones use Bluetooth 5.1 and lack Bose’s Immersive Audio feature.
Finally, both the Ultra models are LE Audio ready, which means they can be upgraded via a firmware update to include LE Audio features such as Auracast that would allow you to tune into audio broadcasts over Bluetooth, say from a TV at your gym. The LE Audio standard also includes support for the LC3 audio codec.
Modest improvements to already very good sound quality
I spent some time comparing the sound quality of the QC Ultra Headphones to that of the Sony WH-1000XM5 and AirPods Max. While the QC Ultra Headphones have the same drivers as the Headphones 700, the Ultras’ sound has improved from the 700’s. It’s not a huge improvement, but the Ultras’ seem slightly cleaner sounding and more revealing, with deep but well-defined bass. Since they feature the same drivers, most of the audio quality gains come from a more powerful chipset, which has improved digital processing power. Bose also has a feature that optimizes the sound for your particular ears.
Both the Sony XM5 and AirPods Max are excellent sounding headphones and sound quality is subjective, as everybody has different ears and different musical tastes. But I’d say this Bose is a touch ahead of both the Sony and the AirPods Max for sound quality. The Sony has a slightly warmer sound profile, and the Bose just comes across as slightly more natural sounding than the AirPods Max. By that I mean it sounds slightly more accurate.
The headphones go into a sleep mode when you take them off your head.
Using the Immersive Audio mode does open up the sound, giving it an airier quality. Everything sounds a little more dynamic and vocals come forward a bit and there’s a bit more separation between instruments with more sparkle in the treble. When you switch back to stereo mode, everything sounds a little duller. You ears eventually adjust and you don’t notice as much, but the natural tendency will be for people to engage the Immersive Audio (whether you choose the still or motion mode is another matter).
For testing, I mainly leave the equalizer at the default flat setting. It’s only a three-band equalizer — you can choose from a few presets or adjust the sliders yourself. Ideally it would be a five-band equalizer, but in years past, Bose didn’t allow you to adjust the sound (there was just the Bose signature sound), so having even this amount of control is a plus.
The headphones are fairly well-balanced in the default setting. Like Beats, Bose used to get criticized for having some bass push, but that’s not the case anymore. The bass is powerful but not overpowering and it remains tight, even at higher volumes.
I used a few streaming services, including Apple Music, Spotify and Qobuz to listen to tracks and I also plugged the headphone cable in to have a listen in wired mode, both with and without a headphone amp. I didn’t really notice a bump in sound in wired mode, but I need to run some more tests to be sure.
I listened to an eclectic mix of music. Tracks included Spoon’s Knock Knock Knock, Athletes of God’s Don’t Wanna Be Normal, Orbital’s Dirty Rat, Bjork’s Hollow, Drake’s Passionfruit, Pixies’ Vault of Heaven, Florence and The Machine’s Choreomania and various Foo Fighters tracks. The headphones seem well-suited for listening to a variety of music genres.
What I don’t like
I was slightly disappointed the headphones don’t feature USB-C audio. You get a headphone cable for wired listening, which will come in handy for air travel. But with most smartphones now missing a headphone jack, it’d be nice to be able to plug a USB-C cable directly into your phone and have an all-digital wired connection for listening to lossless audio tracks. The Beats Studio Pro and some other headphones offer that feature. And now Android devices and the latest iPhones have USB-C connectivity.
I have one other small gripe. Bose has been using Qualcomm chipsets in its recent headphones, and it says both new QC Ultra models feature Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Sound Technology Suite (QCC5181 chipset) and have support for the aptX Adaptive audio codec, including lossless and low-latency capabilities for Android and other devices that offer aptX compatibility. There’s also Swift Pair for Android, while Apple users get the AAC audio codec, which also compatible with Android devices. But I had some problems getting aptX to work.
I paired the headphones with a Google Pixel 7, which supports aptX audio, but it defaulted to the AAC audio code for HD Audio even after I accessed developer mode. (With Android devices, you sometimes have to turn on developer mode to gain access to additional audio codecs.) When I paired them with a Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5, which is supposed to be Snapdragon Sound-enabled, the same thing happened. However, when I connected them to an Asus ROG Phone 6, another Snapdragon-enabled phone, I was able use aptX Adaptive. I found the whole thing a little irritating.
Great noise canceling and excellent voice-calling performance
I’ll finish by talking about the noise canceling and voice-calling performance. As I said, Bose isn’t talking up the noise canceling as much as it usually does. Maybe that’s because it’s as good as it is and speaks for itself. You can argue over whether Sony or Bose has better noise canceling — and Apple’s is also excellent — but I wore these in the raucous streets of New York and the headphones really muffled everything around me, including people’s voices. It’s top-notch.
Voice-calling performance is also excellent. I was told they have five microphones in each earcup (four external and one inside the earcup) that help drive both the noise-canceling and voice-calling performance. While I was slightly disappointed with how much background noise the QC Ultra Earbuds let in, that wasn’t an issue with these full-size Ultras. Even in noisy environments, callers said they heard only minimal background noise while my voice came through clearly.
If you want to get a sense of the QC Ultra Headphones’ voice-calling performance, I show a test call in my companion video review of these headphones, so check that out.
Why should I get these instead of the AirPods Max?
The AirPods Max are excellent headphones with a uniquely premium design that I rated highly and continue to recommend despite their elevated price. That said, they obviously appeal only to Apple users, while headphones like the Bose QC Ultra Headphones and Sony WH-1000XM5 are more platform-agnostic and have a appeal for both iOS and Android users.
It’s also worth noting that the AirPods Max are almost three years old and are probably due for an upgrade in the coming year. And while they’re surprisingly comfortable given how much they weigh, they’re still pretty heavy and don’t come with a headphone cable for wired listening (you have to purchase the cable separately). On top of that, the QC Ultra Headphones’ case is better than the controversial case that’s included with AirPods Max. The Bose also has slightly better noise canceling and may also have a slight edge for sound quality, depending on your audio tastes. And the Bose does cost a little less.
Why should I get these instead of the Sony WH-1000XM5?
This a bit of a trickier question because I still like the WH-1000XM5s a lot — we gave them an Editors’ Choice award in 2022. The Sony is arguably a touch more comfortable than the Bose and also features excellent sound, great noise canceling and best-in-class voice-calling performance. But the Bose headphones both fold up and fold flat, so their carrying case is smaller, and the Bose arguably has slightly better sound and perhaps a touch better noise canceling. I think the Sony has a slight edge for voice calling but it’s not by much.
I prefer that the Sony has support for Sony’s LDAC audio codec (rather than aptX) and like Sony’s Speak-to-Chat feature that automatically pauses your audio and puts the headphones in transparency mode when you talk to someone, enabling you to have a conversation without taking your headphones off. Apple brought a similar feature to the AirPods Pro 2 — it calls the feature Conversation Awareness — but not the AirPods Max.
Bose’s companion app is more user-friendly than Sony’s, and the new Immersive Audio feature does offer some sound enhancements. How much is debatable, but it’s better than than Sony’s 360 Reality Audio simply because it works with any stereo tracks — not just tracks encoded for 360 Reality Audio.
When all is said and done, the Bose has the slight edge in my book, but the Sony will get the better discounts because it’s been on the market for more than a year and will hold a price advantage over the Bose until it also goes on sale.
Bose QC Ultra Headphones final thoughts
Despite the fact that Bose made a bad decision when it moved away from its QuietComfort branding in 2019 when it released the poorly named Noise Cancelling Headphones 700, that headphone does have a lot of fans. The QuietComfort Ultra Headphones may not be a huge upgrade over the 700 (it has the same drivers after all), it does offer some meaningful improvements both in terms of its design and performance. If I were a 700 owner, I wouldn’t be in a rush to run out in buy if my headphones were still in good condition, but I’d certainly be tempted to upgrade if and when the Ultras go on sale.
I do think the QC Ultra Headphones are a compelling alternative to the Sony WH-1000XM5s and Apple AirPods Max, and also hold a slight edge over such premium models as the Bowers & Wilkins PX7 S2E ($400), another very good set of headphones. If these models are a little out of your price range, the Sennheiser Momentum 4 Wireless, which have dipped to as low as $250 in a sale, are an option. So, too, are the , which dropped to $180 for fall Prime Day and should see discounts during the holidays.
But if you’re looking for the best noise-canceling headphones, the Bose QC Ultra Headphones are certainly at or near the top of the heap, even with their small downsides. Hopefully, over time they’ll get even better with a few firmware upgrades.
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