Great question. You can listen to music or take calls while paired to another rider, but you can't share the music (or call). There are several newer headsets that can share music and communicate with more than one rider at a time, but none are anywhere near as affordable as these.
Good suggestion! We both have tablet mounts for GPS maps. We made an install video, but not a review. We like `em. Cody has a smart phone mount, but I dont yet. We'll try to get a review on his soon. We have a crazy ride planned this weekend, so maybe we'll record that to if I remember.
When you say, only two people can talk at a time does that mean only two people can connect at a time or you can connect multiple headsets but only two can talk two at a time?
@@MathewsGuitarWorks It works very well for the price. We brought 3. My kids share 1 for when I ride with them, Cody has 1, and I have 1. It's been good for teaching the kids (video of my youngest loosing the training wheels comes out this week), and for Cody and I communicating on rides. I would like a pricier set that can communicate with more people at once, but still don't regret this purchase. I would just say to evaluate whether you think you need to communicate with multiple people at once. If not, this is likely the best bang per buck.
@jonhill329 When just using coms, we've had no problem getting 10 hour (or more) rides on a charge so far. Cody uses his for music as well, but I don't know if his has ever died on a ride. I'll ask him to chime in here.
@@jonhill329 No problem. I'll likely upgrade eventually to get a set that can communicate with several others at the same time, but this set has been great for the price.
@@WyomingFamilyAdventures I have the sena and cardo packtalk, was checking the compatibility with this unit, hint, there is none. lol, but yes, for the price, this little comm unit does very well. last couple of days I used it all day with little issue, and good range and battery life wasn't a problem. Hard to beat it for 20 bucks.
@@jonhill329 Great to know. Thank you for following up with your findings. I'm wondering if their Q series comms are compatible with the name brand units, as they are fairly feature packed at a fraction of the price.
Not really, but only because I don't really use the buttons when riding. They are definitely too small to use with gloves IMHO. But, once connected, there's no reason to mess with buttons. It answers calls automatically on second ring and goes back to comms after the call.
Nice info, can you listen music togheter that you paired
Great question. You can listen to music or take calls while paired to another rider, but you can't share the music (or call). There are several newer headsets that can share music and communicate with more than one rider at a time, but none are anywhere near as affordable as these.
I'd also love to see a review of whatever smartphone mount you have. I'd imagine that'd have to be pretty good for Wyoming off-roading.
Good suggestion! We both have tablet mounts for GPS maps. We made an install video, but not a review. We like `em. Cody has a smart phone mount, but I dont yet. We'll try to get a review on his soon. We have a crazy ride planned this weekend, so maybe we'll record that to if I remember.
@@WyomingFamilyAdventures - Thanks bud, ride safe please.
@@camberweller That phone mount video is posted.
Great review. Thank you.
Glad to be helpful. Thank you for watching.
When you say, only two people can talk at a time does that mean only two people can connect at a time or you can connect multiple headsets but only two can talk two at a time?
@@MathewsGuitarWorks up to 6 devices in total can be linked. Only 2 of them can communicate at the same time.
@@MathewsGuitarWorks It works very well for the price. We brought 3. My kids share 1 for when I ride with them, Cody has 1, and I have 1. It's been good for teaching the kids (video of my youngest loosing the training wheels comes out this week), and for Cody and I communicating on rides. I would like a pricier set that can communicate with more people at once, but still don't regret this purchase. I would just say to evaluate whether you think you need to communicate with multiple people at once. If not, this is likely the best bang per buck.
what kinda times you getting on battery life?
@jonhill329 When just using coms, we've had no problem getting 10 hour (or more) rides on a charge so far. Cody uses his for music as well, but I don't know if his has ever died on a ride. I'll ask him to chime in here.
@@WyomingFamilyAdventures interesting, thats pretty decent actually. thanks for the info boss. :)
@@jonhill329 No problem. I'll likely upgrade eventually to get a set that can communicate with several others at the same time, but this set has been great for the price.
@@WyomingFamilyAdventures I have the sena and cardo packtalk, was checking the compatibility with this unit, hint, there is none. lol, but yes, for the price, this little comm unit does very well. last couple of days I used it all day with little issue, and good range and battery life wasn't a problem. Hard to beat it for 20 bucks.
@@jonhill329 Great to know. Thank you for following up with your findings. I'm wondering if their Q series comms are compatible with the name brand units, as they are fairly feature packed at a fraction of the price.
are those speeds in MPG or KMPH ?
@@danilodjuricic2177 mph
Do you find the buttons too small?
Not really, but only because I don't really use the buttons when riding. They are definitely too small to use with gloves IMHO. But, once connected, there's no reason to mess with buttons. It answers calls automatically on second ring and goes back to comms after the call.
@@WyomingFamilyAdventures - Thank you!
@@camberweller glad to help!