Bluetooth Hands-free Speakerphone for Car
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Exclusively OMNI/PR, for Reasons
Posts: 4,188
Bluetooth Hands-free Speakerphone for Car
I've decided its time to bring my old truck into the 21st century and equip it with a hands-free speakerphone, bluetooth variety.
The choices have been narrowed down to the Jabra Freeway and Motorola Cruiser 2. Both are well reviewed, and the positives and negatives seem similar.
Has anyone here compared the two directly? Any negative experiences with either? Are there models I should check out that I may not have fully appreciated?
Thanks.
The choices have been narrowed down to the Jabra Freeway and Motorola Cruiser 2. Both are well reviewed, and the positives and negatives seem similar.
Has anyone here compared the two directly? Any negative experiences with either? Are there models I should check out that I may not have fully appreciated?
Thanks.
#4
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: YYZ/YKZ
Posts: 3,668
You may be interested in purchasing a car stereo which includes Bluetooth capabilities. Not only will you have a more integrated BT system (you get a wired microphone you can mount anywhere in the vehicle) but also more music functionality (iPod, satellite radio, etc). For $200-300 you can get a nicely featured unit for your truck. If you are inclined, they usually are not hard to install.
#5
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Exclusively OMNI/PR, for Reasons
Posts: 4,188
That's a possibility, but I've ripped the dash out of my truck once already to install an aux input for my old iRiver h120 MP3 player (long since replaced with an iPod Touch). I don't relish the thought of doing that again
The simplicity and portability of the dedicated speakerphone is attractive as I also occasionally rent a car for regional trips and few of them are Bluetooth equipped.
The simplicity and portability of the dedicated speakerphone is attractive as I also occasionally rent a car for regional trips and few of them are Bluetooth equipped.
#6
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Liberty International...
Programs: OMNI Platinum
Posts: 9,721
The Jabara Freeway goes for $114 on Amazon. Why would you buy something that expensive when there are cheaper options?
http://www.amazon.com/Motorola-Bluet...etooth+car+kit I bought this one for a friend and she has no complaints about it.
http://www.amazon.com/Motorola-Bluet...etooth+car+kit I bought this one for a friend and she has no complaints about it.
#7
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Exclusively OMNI/PR, for Reasons
Posts: 4,188
The Jabara Freeway goes for $114 on Amazon. Why would you buy something that expensive when there are cheaper options?
http://www.amazon.com/Motorola-Bluet...etooth+car+kit I bought this one for a friend and she has no complaints about it.
http://www.amazon.com/Motorola-Bluet...etooth+car+kit I bought this one for a friend and she has no complaints about it.
Features vary, and the two I've selected are equipped with those that I need. Most important are:
- Ability to pair with two phones simultaneously
- Sufficient volume to work in a noisier vehicle (a Chevy Silverado in my case)
- Very good noise cancellation
- Some sort of SMS/email to speech (and vice versa) capability
The Freeway offers a very strong feature set, but appears to be weaker in the noise cancellation department. I'm leaning toward the Motorola Roadster 2 with its superior noise cancellation because of that, and it has enough of the remaining features to satisfy my needs.
Thanks for your input.
#8
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Liberty International...
Programs: OMNI Platinum
Posts: 9,721
I haven't bought the Jabra Freeway, at least yet.
Features vary, and the two I've selected are equipped with those that I need. Most important are:
The Freeway offers a very strong feature set, but appears to be weaker in the noise cancellation department. I'm leaning toward the Motorola Roadster 2 with its superior noise cancellation because of that, and it has enough of the remaining features to satisfy my needs.
Thanks for your input.
Features vary, and the two I've selected are equipped with those that I need. Most important are:
- Ability to pair with two phones simultaneously
- Sufficient volume to work in a noisier vehicle (a Chevy Silverado in my case)
- Very good noise cancellation
- Some sort of SMS/email to speech (and vice versa) capability
The Freeway offers a very strong feature set, but appears to be weaker in the noise cancellation department. I'm leaning toward the Motorola Roadster 2 with its superior noise cancellation because of that, and it has enough of the remaining features to satisfy my needs.
Thanks for your input.
#9
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Exclusively OMNI/PR, for Reasons
Posts: 4,188
The bulk of my travel for business is done within northern New England, from the central coast region of Maine to central Massachusetts. For those trips I rent a car, as they're usually 150+ miles each way. Noise cancellation isn't as much an issue with the rentals, but the 2-phone requirement is still there
#10
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: BNE, Australia...not too far from the nearest Qantas Pub err Club
Posts: 3,636
The other benefit is that your contact list is transferred to the car, so far easier and safer (or at least less distracting) to initiate calls from a large touchscreen.
#11
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Exclusively OMNI/PR, for Reasons
Posts: 4,188
I have an Eclipse AVN-2210p in one of my cars, installed after trying various BT options. It is a far superior device for making calls while on the move at high speed. It has all the above, just the SMS -> speech is a bit quiet, however the text appears on the screen (Nokia Lumia 800 - this SMS -> speech + text doesn't work with IP4).
The other benefit is that your contact list is transferred to the car, so far easier and safer (or at least less distracting) to initiate calls from a large touchscreen.
The other benefit is that your contact list is transferred to the car, so far easier and safer (or at least less distracting) to initiate calls from a large touchscreen.
#12
Join Date: Oct 2009
Programs: Don't you know who I am????
Posts: 297
I've used the Freeway quite a bit with rentals that don't have BT (or that have no manual and a non-obvious pairing procedure), and it has served me well. Never had a complaint about audio quality. It has excellent battery life, uses a motion sensor to put itself to sleep, and it is the loudest visor/type device I have used. In Montana and Colorado, I've ended up with a Jeep Wrangler a few times, the cabin of that vehicle demands a loud device and the Jabra was more than adequate. I have been in a vehicle when the Moto was in use, I'd say the incoming quality was similar, but I believe the Jabra has louder output volume. Can't speak to the outbound call quality. The Jabra has been on sale at Best Buy a few times, so if you can wait, you are likely to see it < $100 US again.
Cheers.
Cheers.
#13
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Liberty International...
Programs: OMNI Platinum
Posts: 9,721
I've used the Freeway quite a bit with rentals that don't have BT (or that have no manual and a non-obvious pairing procedure), and it has served me well. Never had a complaint about audio quality. It has excellent battery life, uses a motion sensor to put itself to sleep, and it is the loudest visor/type device I have used. In Montana and Colorado, I've ended up with a Jeep Wrangler a few times, the cabin of that vehicle demands a loud device and the Jabra was more than adequate. I have been in a vehicle when the Moto was in use, I'd say the incoming quality was similar, but I believe the Jabra has louder output volume. Can't speak to the outbound call quality. The Jabra has been on sale at Best Buy a few times, so if you can wait, you are likely to see it < $100 US again.
Cheers.
Cheers.
If you don't mind an open box item, you can get the Freeway for $54.99
http://www.n1wireless.com/Bluetooth_...l#.T98s4PXCQXk
#14
Original Poster
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Exclusively OMNI/PR, for Reasons
Posts: 4,188
If you don't mind an open box item, you can get the Freeway for $54.99
http://www.n1wireless.com/Bluetooth_...l#.T98s4PXCQXk
http://www.n1wireless.com/Bluetooth_...l#.T98s4PXCQXk
If the Moto device doesn't work out, I'll give N1Wireless a shot. Thanks for the link!
#15
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 1,154
FWIW, I've been using the motorola roadster (although I don't think it's the 2 version), and for the most part I've been satisfied with it. Voice quality is decent enough, and I can crank the volume up enough that I've never had a problem hearing it. I do find that I can't use the transmit to the radio part, I can never seem to get a clear signal to the radio when I do that (but quite honestly, over the years, I've *never* been able to get an fm transmit to the radio device to work adequately).
Never tried the text message reading capability, I don't believe in text messages .
Never tried the text message reading capability, I don't believe in text messages .