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BEATS STUDIO PRO

Design & Construction

The Beats Studio line is back, and this time under Apple's care, it is getting a much-awaited upgrade, though it looks the same on the outside. Diving straight into the design, the Studio Pro retains almost everything about the original aesthetic: an overall plastic build with metal headband arm extenders covered by a typical silicone headband. The metal arms extend in steps and have enough resistance for the earcups not to shift the set length. Both earcups bear the printed B logo with the headphones having the same soft leather cushions, which is meant for providing a comfortable experience, even for users who wear spectacles like myself. The depth of the earcups are manageable for my ears, however those with bigger ears should avoid it altogether since it may not be able to encase your ears fully and sit on it instead causing wearing fatigue. Onto the exterior of the headphones, it gives off this youthful aesthetic and subtle elegance with a matte-like finish, although made up of mostly plastic, to keep lightweight at 260g. Now, onto the classic design of all time, the Beats Studio Pro still folds upwards into a much more compact form. The included carrying case has is a hybrid type of rugged material that can flatten a little when not used and retains it form to protect the headphones. Inside, there are slots for cables to store our 3.5mm audio cable for wired use and the USB-C to USB-C cable for charging, with no airplane adapter included. Now back to the headphones. it is all good from here as we have all our familiar controls and buttons. Under the left earcup, there is the 3.5mm input with the left earcup face as the D-pad for playback controls. A single press on the Beats logo will play/pause, a double press skips forward and a triple press skips backwards with a triple press while a long press will bring up Siri. Controlling the loudness can be done through the button presses on the top and bottom rocker. On the right earcup, we have the power button that allows for you to cycle through the Noise-Cancelling Modes with a double press. Underneath, you will see the USB-C for charging and wired lossless audio use. The Studio Pro supports Bluetooth Multi-point connection, so you can listen to music on your laptop and take calls on your phone. In terms of call controls, a single press on the power button will answer/end the call. While in a call, double-pressing the power button will mute the mics.

Sound Quality

Exciting and energetic is how I would describe the sound of the Beats Studio Pro. So let's start off with the bass response. In short, it is deep, punchy, and tight. The 40m drivers never manages to distort at loud and maximum volumes and does not bleeds into the mids when it is at a low volume level. The bass depth doesn't rattle the headphones much and is far from what you can expect from the bass-heavy Sennheiser Momentum 4 Wireless. However, the bass is stronger than the AirPods Max or Bose QuietComfort Ultra. The highs sound bright and the mids do sound crisp. The soundstage is decent with Dolby Spatial Audio support but nowhere as refined and wide as the mind-blowing AirPods Max's Spatial Audio. The instrument separation is excellent with distinct left and right channels being heard clearly. Unfortunately , if you are not a fan of the out of the box sound signature, you are pretty much stuck as neither the Android app nor the IOS settings has any form of sound equaliser settings. Overall, I would describe the sound signature to be V-shaped and well suited for Pop, Rock, R&B, EDM and Hip-Hop. In the settings, you are first greeted with the status of the headphones' name and battery status. Moving downwards, we have a few tabs here, starting with the modes tab. It allows for the toggling of different noise-cancelling modes like Quiet, Aware, Immersion and more. Each has different levels of noise-cancelling and wind block. However, if wind block is enabled, the ANC setting will be fixed. You can customise and add various other modes with your specific settings in the customisable presets as well. Based on my testing and usage, I would rank the QuietComfort Ultra behind the Sony WH-1000XM5 and the Apple AirPods Max. Its ANC is much better than the Sonos Ace or the Bowers & Wilkins PX8. From the hum of the airplane cabin, traffic sirens and horns, strong winds, and even high-frequency screams or baby cryings, the QC Ultra blocks all that with no cabin pressure. The headphones does feature on-head detection that pauses your music should you remove your headphones. Alternatively, you may also switch to Aware Mode where you can utilise the microphones to take in surrounding noises for safety as well as focus on voice which keeps the ambient noise low and takes in more of human voices instead as well as turn off all settings for passive noise isolation. One notable feature of the Aware mode is ActiveSense which blocks any sudden loud noises like sirens so that you do not get a large wave of noise intake as the mics do suppress it to prevent both hearing damage and random shocks. However, you cannot adjust the volume of transparency like you can on the Sony WH-1000XM5. Comparing the Aware mode with the AirPods Max, I would give the edge to Apple's Transparency Mode as it is simply the most natural-sounding transparency that seems to know what to filter out and take in. Next, there is the source tab where you can connect to your saved devices. With a multipoint Bluetooth connection, the QuietComfort Ultra can connect up to 2 devices at once, and you may add or remove another device from the app. Next, we have the EQ tab that allows you to choose from presets or manually customise your own. There are presets like Bass Boost, Bass Reducer, Treble Boost, and Treble Reducer. Personally, I prefer to customise my own to a V-shaped sound signature. Next, there is the Immersive Audio tab, where there are three settings: Off, Still. and Motion. I usually stick to the Still option for day-to-day music listening, but I can see the potential for Motion mode to be used when watching movies to give it more dimension. Now, you may also customise the press and hold settings for the shortcut button found on the left earcup in the app to either hear the battery levels, access your smart assistant, switch Immersive Audio modes or activate Spotify Tap. However, you can only set one function at any one time, so you may have to give up smart assistant control if you want to change Immersive Audio modes like what I have decided to set here. There is the Tip tab where you can learn about your headphones' controls, should you forget how to use them. You will then see the current song playing and adjust the volume slider or skip songs in the player found at the bottom of the app. Lastly, in the settings, you can change your headphones' name, update the firmware, and set preferences like self-voice volume during calls, Auto-off timing from 5 minutes to never, and the language of voice prompts and on-head detection for auto-pause music when you remove the headphones from your head. Call quality is as top-notch as ever with its proven microphone array that isolates my voice against ambient noises. The caller on the other end feedback that the microphones do not pick up surrounding noise, but I do have to speak up slightly when outdoors. Wind noise reduction was great, as hardly any wind noise could get through even if it was quite strong outdoors. However, when put against the AirPods Max's superior call quality, it sadly fails to beat the competition. 

Connectivity & Portability

The Studio Pro supports the basic AAC and SBC codecs, together with the relatively new Bluetooth Version 5.3. The battery life peaks at 24 hours with ANC on and up to 40 hours with just ANC off. The Studio Pro does feature Fast Fuel capabilities, which only require 10 minutes of charging for 4 hours of playback. The headphones' connectivity to the app is perfect, as it can detect my headphones when they're already connected via Bluetooth all the time. If you try to watch videos or movies with these, they do not have any latency in audio transmission. 

PROS

  • Energetic Sound Signature

  • Modern Design

  • Lightweight

  • Long Battery Life

  • Easy Controls For Music Play & Calls

  • Strong Noise-Cancelling

  • Transparency Mode

  • Spatial Audio

  • Bluetooth 5.3

  • Multi-device Connection

  • Hardshell Carrying Case

  • USB-C Fast Charging

CONS​​​​

  • No Airplane Adaptor

  • No Dedicated 6-Band Equaliser

The Bottom Line

In all, the Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones debut gives consumers a compelling alternative when choosing a trusted brand for new noise-cancelling headphones. Lightweight modern design, strong noise-cancelling, neutral sound signature, long 24-hour battery life, and a straightforward app interface are some of the features that help it stay on top of the pack when it comes to recommending one of the best. It is highly recommended for daily commutes and long flights. Five colours of Black, White Smoke, Lunar Blue, Deep Plum, and Diamond 60th Edition are available to fit users of different genders and styles.

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WE RATE IT!

9/10

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