HI ian.
If your air pods are still under warranty, I would get this looked into
promptly as each pod contains a non-replaceable battery which in your case may
be faulty. Replacement Air Pods are sold but at £65 a pop. As for
alternatives, there are some excellent wireless earbuds and earphones out
there; I personally am a fan of the Plantronics Backbeat Fit range which are
wireless sport headphones, extremely comfortable and open ear design so no
noise cancellation or suppression, critical if you’re out and about. Bose,
Sennheiser also do models if you’re a fussy audiophile and have the cash to
spend or there’s the Aftershokz which are bone conducting so work through the
cheek bones to deliver sound to the inner ear.
Hope this helps, Ibrahim.
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of Iain Lackie
Sent: 10 March 2019 13:50
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Re: In Ear Bluetooth headphones
I am a great fan of AirPods. They are especially good for in bed use! However,
I am having a problem with mine in that the left Pod seems to be discharging
much faster than the right. This morning when listening, my left Pod went down
to 3% while the right was showing 71%. Has anyone else had this problem?
Iain
On 10 Mar 2019, at 1:38 pm, Ian Macrae (Redacted sender "ian.macrae1" for
DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Hi Clive, as I only own and use Apple devices I haven’t tried the airPods with
anything else. The one advantage with them is that they have absolutely no
wires at all. People have suggested that this makes them easier to lose but
that has not been my experience as they stow very well in the charging case. In
more general terms, perhaps a search on Amazon would be a good starting point?
Ian Macrae
ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx<mailto:ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx>
On 10 Mar 2019, at 13:03, Clive Lever
<clive.lever1955@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:clive.lever1955@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Thanks Ian,
Do those Apple Airpods assume or require the use of proprietary Apple devices?
In other words, if I pair it to my windows PC, will they work? The requirement
for a robust pair is that if the wires are too thin, I only have to forget to
pick them up once, and one of the cats will sever the wires, and I’ll be off to
buy another pair.
Thanks,
Clive
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
[mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Ian Macrae ;(Redacted sender
"ian.macrae1" for DMARC)
Sent: Sunday, March 10, 2019 12:40 PM
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [access-uk] Re: In Ear Bluetooth headphones
Hi Clive, I don’t have much experience across this range but I really like my
Apple airPods which I use for reading books with TTS and for listening to
music. I also used a pair of LG HBS 900 in-ear ones which pull out of a neck
band and retract back into it again when not in use but I found that eventually
the pulling out action put strain on the wire and eventually the connection
broke. It’s a shame because these served me very well until then.
Ian Macrae
ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx<mailto:ian.macrae1@xxxxxxx>
On 10 Mar 2019, at 10:36, Clive Lever
<clive.lever1955@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:clive.lever1955@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
Hi All,
Does anyone have any recommendations for a fairly robust model of in-ear
Bluetooth headphones, with accessible and usable controls. I have a set of AKG
over-ear Bluetooth headphones, but would like an in-ear se to take away on so
that I can put them on in bed and listen before going to sleep.
Thanks,
Clive