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Jabra Solemate Max review

The Jabra Solemate Max is a portable wireless and wired Bluetooth-capable NFC enhanced boombox and speakerphone. It’ll also act as a USB audio device for Windows (possibly Mac), charge your phone for you, and is heavy enough to keep a weiner dog down in high winds.

It was first demoed at the International Consumer Electronics Showcase (according to an email from the PR firm), and I was lucky enough to get one to play with.

The Solemate Max sits at the edge of portable, and merely luggable, but since they were nice enough to send me one to look at, I’m inclined to put it in the portable category. I’d say it was a brick, but bricks are half a pound lighter.

Solemate Max features and specs

What’s in the Solemate Max box?

The Jabra Solemate Max in action

It took a couple of days for me to actually test this out at full volume. I couldn’t do this indoors, as I had an exceptionally cranky baby on my hands (teething, it’s not fun), and it also decided to alternately be freezing cold, raining, and otherwise not good speaker weather – but finally I did.

My first attempt at cranking it up was in my front yard, where I quickly decided to kill it when it was audible over to the retirement castle across the street. I stopped that, as blasting covers of John Denver at full volume is not my thing and moved around back.

At this point I placed the Solemate Max on the ground and started walking. At 16 paces the audio started sputtering, so somewhere around 28 feet or so was how far my phone was willing to transmit. Not too shabby, although in a crowded room that will be drastically reduced. Cranking the audio and leaving the phone, I walked 26 paces before the audio just wasn’t particularly distinct any more.

For the average house or pool party, this covered the range of what it needed to, although with the speaker being designed for that scenario throwing in the speakerphone functionality seems a bit odd, but oh well.

The bass and sound reproduction quality on dampish dirt was what you would expect, but the audio shines when you put it up off the ground on a decent surface. Not the best audio I’ve heard; however, hands down the best audio at the volumes it’s capable of producing in a portable Bluetooth speaker. That’s a compliment even if it doesn’t read like one.

Jabra Solemate pros

Solemate cons

Miscellaneous

I found when attempting to write this up that at the moment there’s no MSRP listed on the website, nor is it listed as even available. This isn’t unexpected with the Jabra website, as it doesn’t seem to receive the attention it needs. Amazon has the price listed as $399.99 which I’m hoping will drop after it’s out of the gate for a few weeks.

Wrap-up

Good speaker, would probably be in the $80 range if it were wired, I do not see a reason at this point for speakerphone functionality, sound effects and voice are annoying after a while but can be disabled, I’d expect to pay about $250 for something like this. But it might be worth it if you want it for this summer’s pool parties.

The Jabra Solemate Max is available from Amazon for $399.

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