Not exact matches
The
speaker's located at the back, and the
volume doesn't seem to be
loud enough to continue attracting attention from kids.
HERE»S WHAT I DO N'T LIKE:
Loud wind noise (anytime I exceed 40 - 45 mph), makes it hard to hear the radio at normal
volume; intrusive road noise, which I corrected by swapping out the standard Goodyear tires with Continental tires; lackluster acceleration for a V6 engine, CVT tends to lose momentum when you lift your foot off of the gas pedal — often jerky when accelerating and decelerating while in motion and when accelerating from a dead stop; as mentioned by another reviewer, accelerator hesitates before catching when shifting from reverse to drive; bumps in the road are not well absorbed (the 2016 model may have addressed this issue); no power to windows after you shut off the engine; no auto door locks; poor V6 fuel efficiency averaging around 24 MPGs combined; trunk lid's arms and safety feature makes it heavy and sometimes hard to lift open; Infotainment system does understand most voice commands; and Harmon Kardon
speakers are sometimes crackly.
I am not one to blast music - the
volume never really gets above 12 on the car so please don't think that I just blast the music all the time then complain when the
speakers stop working... Aside from the infotainment, the windscreen area squeaks and creaks incredibly
loud when the temperature drops below about 50 Fahrenheit.
We were surprised that the small
speakers on the back of the Alex produced
loud audio, even at 75 percent
volume.
Speaking of music, the
speakers are on the back of the unit and even on full
volume does not really provide
loud audio.
Though it relies on two small
speakers, the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 produced much
louder volume, but with less bass when playing the same song.
The
speakers are
loud so the
volume is good, but the sound quality that is produced is typical tablet
speaker sound, with clear vocals but little bass of course.
The
speakers output reasonably solid - sounding music audio — though I had to pump the
volume to the max to achieve that result, and to make the music
loud enough for enjoying in a small room.
On the tablet you have a reasonably
loud and clear set of
speakers, a
volume rocker and power button.
Its outward - pointing
speaker is a nice change from rear - facing
speakers, and the
speakers get pretty
loud but stay a little tinny when turned up to the maximum
volume.
The Tab's
speakers pumped
volume almost twice as
loud as the Nook Color, which we strained to hear with medium background noise.
The larger space afforded by the rounded hinge stand and battery allow the
speakers to have a larger resonance chamber than most tablet
speakers, and that, paired with Wolfson Master HiFi audio processing, makes for high - quality sound, but the
volume doesn't get quite
loud enough for my liking when turned all the way up.
The
volume and quality of the sound it produces are surprisingly good — noticeably
louder and deeper than the built - in
speakers in the Kindle Fire, which aren't too shabby to begin with.
Everything could be heard and transmitted
loud and clear and the
speaker phone provided plenty of
volume — I get irritated when I can't turn it «up» any higher and still can't hear it well enough.
Down toward the bottom of the rear of the unit is its
speaker, which can be obnoxiously
loud when cranked up to full
volume... and I mean that as a compliment.
The
volume effects battery life so feeding the sound output into external amplified
speakers will often extend the battery life, while using un-amplified
speakers loud enough to hear without headphones will shorten it.
At maximum
volume the external
speaker is just barely
loud enough to hear TV show dialogue in a quiet room, but I wish it were
louder.
For some people a stack of colossal
speakers and an amplifier the size of Wales is not a viable option, and we shall pity those people because they will never know the joys of listening to Back in Black at a
volume so
loud France has begun complaining.
And a high dynamic «Home Cinema» mode for powerful
speakers at
loud volumes.
Word to the wise, never, never have you
speakers on a
loud volume as I did.
The integrated
speakers are
loud at maximum
volume and have a nice, clear mid-range sound, but bass can cause distortion in some tracks.
Audio quality is average for a smartphone and the
volume from the back
speaker loud enough to hear over medium background noise.
Google says it designed the
speaker to get
loud enough to fill a room without distorting at full
volume.
Even with some background noise, you won't necessarily need headphones to listen to music and watch video due to the
speakers»
loud volume.
The iPad automatically adjusts to give you stereo audio whichever way you hold the device, and the combined
volume of those
speakers is much
louder than you can get with the standard iPad — you can watch movies and other video and easily hear audio from across the room.
The
speaker on the back pumped
loud volume for
speaker calls and music, though the quality is tinnier and harsher than we'd like.
The HP
speakers are not as
loud and aren't as rich at any
volume, with any EQ setting.
On the plus side, output from the
speaker doesn't sound distorted at max
volume, but that's at least partially because the
speaker doesn't get anywhere close to what we'd call
loud.
The dual, front - facing
speakers are just
loud enough to fill a small room at maximum
volume.
The
speaker is just
loud enough to make for an effective alarm, yet it distorts considerably at max
volume.
I wish the
speakers were just a smidge
louder, but at max
volume, the sound easily filled a small meeting room.
The
speakers avoid distortion even at
loud volumes, and manage to portray lots of subtleties, especially in the treble register, without sounding tinny or harsh.
It may look like you're seeing two front - facing
speakers on the new design, but it's actually one solo
speaker on the bottom grill, which is more than enough to provide a
loud, crisp sound even when I have it turned up a quarter of the full
volume.
For those that really like to crank the
volume, Apple says the new
speakers are twice as
loud as existing models.
Early adopters have noticed that there seems to be issues with the
speaker screeching or cracking at
loud volumes.
It's not as good as a front - facing pair of stereo
speakers would be, but ASUS has made sure the quality from the
speaker is at least top notch, and not only delivers clean sound with wide range and plenty of
volume, but sound that doesn't rattle when too
loud.
Since the earpiece was never intended to get as
loud as the bottom - firing
speaker, it will have slightly lower
volume.
The dual stereo
speakers above and below the display sound
loud and clear at high
volumes, easily beating my iPhone 7 Plus and the Huawei Mate 9.
At max
volume the
speaker is very
loud for its size, easily providing enough noise to fill a dance - crazed living room.
Small
speakers, meanwhile, tend to struggle with
loud volume.
I could fill that space with music at extremely high
volume (much
louder than I'd ever play) without the
speaker breaking up into unpleasant distortion.
The
speaker is also reasonable, although you have to crank up the
volume at least halfway to hear anything, and there's a fine line between
loud enough to hear and sounding a bit tinny (and there's very little bass).
In speakerphone calls and general audio playback, the Galaxy S4's rear - facing
speaker is reasonably
loud and clear, though it doesn't match the insane
volume and quality of the HTC One's BoomSound
speaker.
While the
speaker can get very
loud, the best audio reproduction is achieved not by maxing out the
volume, but rather by dialing it back a notch or two.
The
speaker combination gets sufficiently
loud, and it doesn't get distorted at high
volumes.
Four
speakers, two at the top and two at the bottom, give the new iPad Pro 9.7 a proper stereo setup, and they're
loud enough to drown out the bottom - firing, twin -
speakers of the iPad Air 2 at full
volume.
Though
speakers usually sounds tighter at low
volumes, this massive
speaker is clearly meant to be played
loud.
Its two 3 watt
speakers produce a surprisingly
loud volume output, and while the drivers do fall a little short in low - end delivery, the sound is otherwise solid.
The right side of the
speaker houses a large
volume knob that is easy to find when the movie you're watching suddenly becomes ten times
louder.
The
speakers were impressively
loud; they filled up a conference room at 70 percent
volume, and I could even hear some stereo separation from the other end of the room.