Not exact matches
The sport exhaust's deeper
bass is one option I find worth the money, unlike
much of the ridiculously priced extra equipment Porsche loves to
deliver its test cars loaded with.
The Echo Plus, however, sounds quite different,
delivering a
much more substantial sound 360 - degree sound with better defined
bass.
The deeply satisfying
bass response the speaker
delivers solo is
much less impressive with movies.
The Fugoo Style and its Sport and Tough variants
deliver clear midrange and treble but not
much bass.
The SRS - XB30
delivers much more
bass than the Roll 2, so it's
much better for hip - hop, R&B, and rock, and it has enough power to fill an average room with sound.
The wireless Sony MDR - XB950B1 headphones
deliver as
much bass thump as any pair we've tested, and because of that never sound quite balanced.
With excellent sound positioning and a well - controlled
bass response, the headset
delivers on sound quality that's
much above its price point.
Although clearer, the QC 15s didn't fare
much better,
delivering distant, hollow
bass with a slightly muted vocal.
For the price of an Echo Dot (Amazon's smallest Alexa unit), the Fabriq
delivers much better audio quality, and it has deeper
bass than other portable Alexa speakers, such as the Jam Voice.
Dialogue sounds clear and locked to the screen, where it should be, and you can hear plenty of subtle detailing - despite the fact that the set's pretty
much invisible speakers also
deliver more
bass than most built in TV sound systems.
Like the rest of Sony's Extra
Bass line of audio products, the SRS - XB40
delivers a ton of
bass depth and impact... maybe a little too
much bass, actually.
Orchestral tracks, like the opening scene in John Adams» The Gospel According to the Other Mary, aren't
delivered with too
much accuracy, instead getting an added
bass punch that pushes the lower register instrumentation forward in the mix.
While they won't blow you away with
bass, they do
deliver good overall sound —
much better than you'd expect for the price.