Review: V-Moda Vibe Duo

V-Moda’s $101 Vibe Duo was the first third-party headphone/microphone combination announced for the iPhone, and is the first one we received for review. Essentially V-Moda’s original Vibe headphones with the addition of an inline microphone, the Duo lets you make and take calls without having to remove your headphones. (In case you aren’t familiar with the original Vibe, it uses a canalbud design—a hybrid between earbuds and true in-ear-canal headphones.)
However, instead of rubber-covered cables, like those on the Vibe, the Duo uses cloth-covered versions; I found the Duo to produce less cable noise—audible bumps and scrapes transferred up the cables to your ear canals, a common issue with in-ear-canal headphones—than the rubber-cabled Vibe models we’ve tested. The Duo also features a new silver-and-black design that matches the iPhone.
Given the identical headphone design and construction, you would expect the Vibe and Vibe Duo to offer similar sound quality; I found this to be the case in my own subjective testing using Apple Lossless files on a standard iPod (the Vibe's miniplug won't fit the iPhone's recessed headphone jack). As such, rather than cover music-listening quality in detail here, I'll direct you to our full review of the Vibe. Suffice it to say that the Vibe Duo offers very good sound quality (with a bit of emphasis at the low end), decent noise isolation, and good comfort--a considerable upgrade in these areas over the iPhone's stock earbuds.
The Duo's most unique features are its iPhone-fitting miniplug and inline microphone. The former is thin enough that it fits into the iPhone's recessed headphone jack without needing an adapter. The latter is located in a thin, one-inch-long pod integrated into the cable for the right earbud; a removable plastic clip lets you attach the Duo's cable to your shirt to optimize microphone placement. When a call comes in (or when you make a call), the iPhone fades out any music or video audio and then pipes the phone's audio into the earbuds; the inline microphone picks up your voice as you talk normally. In relatively quiet environments, this phone functionality works well.
On the other hand, the phone-headset feature of the Duo has a couple drawbacks. The first is that, as with the iPhone's stock earbuds, the built-in microphone offers no noise-cancellation technology; when I was in a noisy environment, the person on the other end of the call at times had trouble hearing me clearly. The second is that, unlike Apple's iPhone earbuds, the Vibe Duo offers no control over iPod or phone functions. Whereas Apple's buds let you answer a call, play/pause playback, or skip to the next track using a button on the cable, the Duo requires you to control such functions using the iPhone's screen. This is fine if your iPhone is out in the open, but a hassle if it's in your pocket or bag.
Overall, the best way to think of the Vibe Duo--and how I ended up using it--is as a quality set of headphones that lets you make or take calls in a pinch; for serious phone use, you'll want a dedicated headset (or, possibly, something like Shure's upcoming Music Phone Adapter). The good news is that if you've ever considered picking up the original Vibe, the new Vibe Duo sells for the same price; you get the same good headphones but with limited phone-headset functionality thrown in for free.
Category: Accessories, Reviews
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Comments (5)
I just couldn't get Apple's earphones to stay in my ears, so I bought these last night. After a morning of use here, I'm sorry to report I'm going to have to return them. Yes, they stay in the ear very nicely, but since the fit is snug (the way it should be) and since your own voice is not fed into the earphones, it's a very strange experience. Just hold both of your hands tightly over your own ears and talk -- that's how you will sound to yourself using these earphones. Maybe I could get used to that, but I'd rather not. The person on the other end sounds great, but it's just weird that your own voice sounds so far removed. After this experience, the Apple earphones are sounding much better to me. They're so loose in the ear (what I wanted to avoid), you at least you can hear yourself -- and the person you're talking to -- perfectly well.
Posted by leibie | July 12, 2007 3:04 PM
Yep, this is an issue with all in-ear-canal headphones, as well as with canalbuds; we discussed it in our primer:
http://playlistmag.com/features/2007/01/canalphones/index.php
Posted by Dan Frakes
|
July 12, 2007 3:45 PM
Just to be clear I use the v-moda vibe headphones all the time with my iPhone...just a little firm pressure seats the plug into iPhone's jack....they sound great!!
Posted by Larry | July 16, 2007 1:38 PM
FYI. To make any headphone fit the Iphone take an Xacto knife and trim off some of the plastic sleeve off of the end on the jack to allow it seat deeper in the Iphone recessed earphone recepticle. Take off litle by little until it works.
Posted by Donald F Cattoni | December 4, 2007 10:33 AM
I was wondering whether anyone was getting a static electric discharge when they are listening to their computers. I think it's occurring because of the metal casing around the earbuds.
Posted by kev y. | December 12, 2007 4:59 PM