Bose Sport Earbuds review: Excellent sound and fit with one downside – CNET [CNET]

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I first wrote about the Bose Sport Earbuds way back in June 2019. Back then, Bose was calling them the Earbuds 500 and I got to try on a non-working prototype. At long last, more than a year later, they’re about to hit stores. At $179 (£180, AU$300), they’re the more affordable, non noise-canceling alternative to Bose’s flagship QuietComfort Earbuds, which retail for $279 (£250, AU$400). While Sport models have some downsides — their quality during phone calls could be better, for example — they feature excellent sound, are lighter and smaller than the QuietComfort Earbuds and also slightly more comfortable to wear. 

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8.0

Bose Sport Earbuds

Like

  • Excellent sound
  • Comfortable, secure fit
  • Rock solid wireless connection
  • IPX4 splash-resistant
  • Smaller and lighter than QuietComfort Earbuds (and the case is more compact)

Don’t Like

  • Buds are smaller than QuietComfort Earbuds but they still protrude from your ears a fair amount
  • Voice calling could be better

The Sport Earbuds have the same IPX4 splash-resistant rating as the QuietComfort Earbuds, are equipped with Bluetooth 5.1 (my connection was rock solid) and share a similar design aesthetic, with three color options available. To be clear, they have no active noise canceling and an hour less of battery life — 5 hours instead of 6 — as well as no wireless charging. While they do stick out from your ears, they’re noticeably smaller and lighter than the QuietComfort Earbuds and their case is about 30% to 40% smaller. The case still isn’t as small as the cases for such competitors as the AirPods Pro, Samsung Galaxy Buds Plus, Galaxy Buds Live and Jabra Elite 75t. But it feels reasonably compact.

Read more: Best true wireless earbuds for 2020: Apple AirPods, Google Pixel Buds and more

I found them slightly more comfortable to wear than the QuietComfort Earbuds, which work fine for for sporting activities. But the Sport Earbuds will be better for runners: For biking both the Sport Earbuds and QuietComfort Earbuds stick out from your ears and create wind noise — the Galaxy Buds Live are better for cycling.

The touch controls are responsive although fairly limited. You can double tap the left earbud to advance tracks, tap the right bud once to pause, and tap and hold the right bud to access your voice assistant. There are no volume controls on the buds themselves.

Two major selling points

Really, the the two biggest selling points for the Sport Earbuds are their fit and sound. The earbuds include three different sizes of Bose’s new StayHear Max eartips, which have integrated wing that allows you to get a really secure fit. Most noise-isolating earbuds are designed to nestle in your yours. With Bose earbuds — and that includes the earlier SoundSport Free — the StayHear tip is what does most of the nestling and the main portion of the buds end up protruding from your ears. It’s not the greatest look, but some people love the way Bose earbuds fit, and with the large tips I was able to get a tight seal that passively seals out a lot of ambient noise and allows you to get optimal sound quality.

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The Sports Earbuds are smaller and lighter than the earlier SoundSport Free.

David Carnoy/CNET

As for how they compare to competing products in their price range, they do sound slightly better than highly rated earbuds like the Samsung Galaxy Buds Plus and Jabra Elite 75t. They just offer a little more clarity and more powerful bass with better definition. However, those models have a more discreet design and offer superior voice calling performance.  

Call quality assessment

The SoundSport Free was criticized for only having mono sound for calls — meaning, the audio of a phone call only came through the right earbud. The Sport Earbuds have stereo sound during calls, though the microphones are housed only in the right bud, so that’s your only choice if you want to make calls with only a single bud. Call quality was pretty good — I could hear callers well and they could hear me — but if I went into noisier environments, the volume of my voice would sometimes drop a bit.

In fact, Bose says that the SoundSport Free has two microphones in the right earbud for voice pickup, versus a total of six mics on the QuietComfort Earbuds. (At least some of those are used to handle the active noise canceling on the latter model.)

I think Bose’s engineers could make some improvements via a firmware upgrade — or at least I’m hoping they can. But for now, voice calling is only fair to decent but falls short of its competitors. It should be a bit better for a $180 set of earbuds.