
We've
had a veritable feast of iPod speaker systems through the doors this
year, so when another one arrived there was race to see who could
get out of the office first to avoid having to take the iBall home.
That lucky winner was me and now I have the Oregon Scientific iBall
perched on my desk sat next to the PC. But it's not all that bad as
the iBall does at least have a new take on the iPod dock / speaker
combo, it's wireless.Using the 2.4Ghz frequency range the iBall
comes in 2 bits, first the obligatory iPod dock, which in the
Oregon's case is also a transmitter and then the ball which is the
speaker. The two talk to each other over a purported 30 meters,
although we'll test that later. The frequency used is a common
one for consumer electronics kit and is also used by Bluetooth, DECT
and home RF such as the iBall, it's a crowded area but with adaptive
frequency hopping the iBall should be able to maintain a clear
channel to work on.
The iBall ships with 6 different dock connectors allowing any
form of iPod to work, the Nano dock was supplied separately but
should join the main package, the iPod shuffle and non Apple players
can also connect via the 3.5mm mini jack on the transmitter unit.
The transmitter dock comes with an AC power adaptor and is always
run from the mains supply, this also has the added benefit of
charging your iPod while its connected to the dock. iBall also
supports the Apple 30 pin connection allowing your iPod to be hooked
to a host PC or Mac and synchronising while sitting connected to the
system.
Having connected out 3G iPod into the dock we could then start to
control it from the iBall, this is a nice feature and means that the
iPod can sit next to your PC on charge while the iBall is free to
roam and yet control, playback play / pause only, volume, input
selection. Its a shame that the Oregon's backlit blue screen is only
used for basic controls like bass / treble and play / pause, we'd
have loved to get actual track selection on the iBall front panel
but you can only start and stop playback, you'll still need to go
back to the iPod to choose new tracks or play lists.
The LCD panel while nice looking is a bit tricky to read using a
weird set of dot matrix symbols to show if there is an iPod in range
and basics like playback status and volume, not sure why they went
with this, it caused us to read the manual! We did suffer a
few disconnects or reluctance to find the iPod, this forced us to re
pair the dock and iBall using the pairing procedure, power up
holding the forwards and backwards buttons then when the symbol
appears on the LCD screen push the recessed pairing button.
Audio quality is a tough area in the higher end iPod speaker
systems, we always demand a lot of these small speakers and the 3
speaker system with bass port of the iBall does its best to met our
challenge. Basic playback sounds good with a clear audio
reproduction and surprisingly plentiful bass for a wireless system.
We have often found that a wireless link somehow removes the
stuffing from audio replay, however the Oregon Scientific system is
very good at low to mid levels.
Crank
up the volume a bit more and the cracks do start to show with a bit
of resonance from the case and we just hit the maximum volume level
far too early, don't get any ideas about running a back garden disco
from one of these. There is a little RF noise which becomes more
pronounced as you reach the extent of the radio coverage, its more
apparent on very quiet tracks and can be annoying. However move
closer to the TX dock and the interference goes away.
To be fair the iBall has a good all round sound and where it
falls down we can forgive it as it is one of the few wireless
systems on the market, we just wish it was a bit louder! Now onto a
distance test, Oregon claim 30 meters (100ft) we managed around 25
meters in free air and around 15 meters indoors through a few walls.
This is plenty for the average house but if you are buying an iBall
for your luxury pad to sit in the west wing, think again. The iBall
part of the system can run off mains (charger supplied) but also
runs from a set of 6 rechargeable batteries which give about 5 and
half hours replay from a charge.
For those with 5G iPod's or iPod Photos there is an S-Video
output on the rear of the dock that allows the slideshows and other
images to be seen during replay, although you'll need a long lead to
get the screen to where the iBall is as the Video is not transmitted
wirelessly.
Priced at just under £170 at launch the Oregon Scientific iBall
is not quite at the top end of the iPod speaker system tree but its
close, for this kind of money we'd expect the sound and volume to be
better than they actually were, however we wouldn't have expected a
working and fairly robust wireless system. So in the rounding the
iBall is actually good value for money and as long as you don't want
to run a mobile disco, you can certainly enjoy wire free iPod
listening in your garden or potting shed.

Published - 25/04/2006
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