Five months have passed since Altec Lansing released its first pairs of “iPhone-compatible” earphones — an over-the-ear pair called UHP307 ($40) and earbuds called UHP301 ($50), both billed as iPhone-ready because their headphone plugs were thin enough to fit Apple’s recessed headphone port. We featured both earphones in First Looks at the time, but didn’t review them because they didn’t offer a complete iPhone headset experience: they were little more than iPhone-sized iPod earphones, lacking the microphones and call/playback control buttons of other true iPhone-ready options, including Apple’s packed-in iPhone Stereo Headset. Altec promised that those features would soon arrive in an update.
In late November, the updated versions arrived: the UHS307 ($40) and UHS301 ($50) offer the same earphone designs, cables, and plugs as their predecessors, but now come with four things not found in the UHP-series designs: an in-line microphone, a single-button call/playback control, a shirt clip, and a 3.5mm to 2.5mm adapter cord for use with non-iPhone mobile phones. Altec also released another model, UHS306 ($90), which replaces the other models’ earbuds with in-canal earphones. Each of the models comes with silicone rubber eartips, a zippered neoprene carrying case, and attractive gray fabric cords; they’re all otherwise primarily made from gray plastic, and feature in-line volume controls in a box that’s separate from the microphone, if one’s included.
Basically, all five of these earphones strike us as a step or two back from the Etymotic-developed earphones Altec was selling a couple of years ago under its inMotion label, introducing elements from Plantronics’ cell phone headsets that don’t necessarily improve the iPhone or iPod earphone experience.
Our separate reviews briefly discuss each version in relation to the others, as well as other iPhone-specific headsets we’ve tested.
The odd man out in the collection is UHS306, which we had expected to like more than we actually did. This model’s in-canal earphones use cooler-looking dark gray barrels and silicone tips, separated by silver metallic speakers and housings. Altec includes four sets of rubber tips—small, medium, large, and double-flange, the latter designed to provide additional passive noise isolation. UHS306 effectively competes with v-moda’s $101 Vibe Duo, which also uses in-canal earphones, fabric cables, and silicone tips, and includes microphone and call/playback button features.
Altec has apparently—we’ll get to that in a minute—included a different microphone that callers told us sounded crisper than the other UHS-series mics, and was apparently designed for intelligibility rather than just pleasant conversation—the high-frequency details are emphasized to let you hear voices over background details. Though our callers said that the optimization was a little over-aggressive, and not optimized for normal conversations in quiet rooms, the mic here is better for people who are frequently using their headsets in noisy environments and want to be heard regardless.
Our main issue with UHS306 was in the user’s listening experience.
Whereas Vibe Duo is a small, comfortable little canalphone with at least one set of tips that will feel right in your ears, none of UHS306’s really did. The single-flange small, medium, and large ones all felt flimsy and odd, while the earphone-elongating double-flanges felt thicker and irritating—these comments, mind you, are coming from users who have liked unmodified triple-flanges in the past. UHS306’s tips just don’t feel right in thickness or tapering. And the sound that’s produced, at least when run through these tips, isn’t impressive for the $90 asking price. It’s merely OK, with limited frequency response similar to the UHS301’s; there’s nothing, like Vibe Duo’s extended bass, to make it stand out from the rest of the pack.
Another problem we had with UHS306 was build quality.