Bose might not have changed much but the SoundLink Revolve II has a lot to like if you’re looking for a compact Bluetooth speaker with 360-degree sound and some smart features. This is still a compact cylinder that’s wider at the bottom than the top and there are rubber sections at either end to absorb impacts if you do happen to drop the speaker.
The SoundLink Revolve II sounds great for a wide range of music, able to deliver enough oomph for The Prodigy while handling the delicate guitar and vocals of Ben Howard.
It does sound best at medium volume levels, but quality does take a bit of a dip at the higher end if you’re trying to fill a large space.
Instead, you get some basic info and settings like battery level and the ability to adjust the auto-off timer and switch the voice prompts if they get annoying. You can buy a charging cradle – it’s a bit like the base of a kettle – which make things a lot easier, although you’ll have to cough up another £24.95 for it.
The Bose SoundLink Revolve II is available to buy now priced at £179.95, although it’s discounted to £154.95 on the official store at the time of writing. You can also buy it from Currys PC World and John Lewis for effectively the RRP, while Amazon and Argos have the speaker for £199. The app could do with an EQ and it is surprising to see Micro-USB on a high-end speaker in 2021, but with battery life extending way beyond the quoted figure of 13 hours, these are fairly easy to forget about.
Amazon.com: Bose SoundLink Revolve (Series II) Portable Bluetooth Speaker – Wireless Water-Resistant Speaker with 360° Sound, Black : Electronics
The sound isn’t great but it’s very, very good, with a prominent midrange and inoffensive treble with sufficient baritone and bass notes. Listening to Duffy “Rockferry” and Caro Emerald “Deleted Scenes From the Cutting Room Floor” both sound great. Battery life is serviceable… I’d expect a unit of this size to have at least double the advertised runtime, so a charging base is already in the shopping cart. If you need more volume and higher fidelity, I’d recommend the Plus version, as it is large enough to accept Bose’s signature tuning and does sound better overall.
The sound is actually so mid-focused and clean, I’m considering buying a second one to use in stereo with my iMac, just plucking one off it’s charging base whenever I head out to the studio or location.
Customer Reviews: Bose SoundLink Revolve II Portable Bluetooth Speaker Triple Black 858365-0100
The bass in particular was notable not so much because it was booming, but rather it added an excellent fullness to the sound that was noticeably lacking in the speaker I was using for comparison purposes, although I didn’t realize what I was missing until I heard the Bose playing the same song. Across a variety of songs from several different genres I found this speaker produced exception sound accuracy for its size, not muddy or distorted at higher volume. While I don’t generally listen to my music at max volume, I look at this speaker as intended for an outdoor event/party so I cranked it all the way up as a test. I thought this would be bad as it seemed that the battery life dropped so rapidly, but I guess the update was just power intensive because over the course of the next several days I ran it a total of 22 hours at home and at work.
The body has a rugged metal casing that doesn’t deform at all under pressure, even around the perforated base. The finish appears to be very scratch resistant and shows absolutely no fingerprints even after several days of frequent handling. The top, including the control buttons is a smooth, soft rubber material that like the metal housing, seems to be impervious to fingerprinting. It is something that I have found is extremely common even in much, much less expensive speakers, and it just felt oddly cheap to leave out of the box.
I also realized upon looking at the bottom of the speaker that it has the ability to be set on a charging base, and I think that would have been a nicer touch to put in the box than the USB cable.
Bose SoundLink Revolve II Review
Its multifunction button plays, pauses, backtracks, and skips your tracks and can also be used to activate your paired voice assistants.
Bose SoundLink Revolve review
The Bose SoundLink Revolve aims to solve the main problem with most wireless speakers: despite their convenience, they’re usually directional, sounding their best in one specific spot. The Bose SoundLink Revolve continues the company’s history of excellent build quality and sound and crams it all into a cylindrical speaker you can take with you on the go.
One negative point we’ll mention straight away is that the IPX4 rating on the SoundLink Revolve means the speaker will survive splashes but probably not a dip in the pool or a trip to the beach. The Revolve takes the design of its predecessor the SoundLink Mini II and stretches it into a cylindrical shape that slightly resembles the Dalek robots from Dr. Who.
The Bose SoundLink Revolve feels extremely well made, and should put up with being tossed in a bag with keys and knick knacks (for example). On top of the Revolve speaker you’ll find buttons for controlling every feature of the unit, including volume, playback, Bluetooth 4.0, aux and power.
The SoundLink revolve works great as a speakerphone for taking calls – something lacking on one of this speaker’s well-regarded contemporaries, the UE Wonderboom. It’s disappointing that Bose didn’t throw in the $30 (£19.95) charging dock for free like it does with the slightly cheaper SoundLink Mini II, which costs $180 (£170, AU$300).
On the inside the Revolve features a dual passive radiator setup running up the sides of the speaker to fill out the lower end of the audio spectrum. Mids and trebles are handled by a downward facing transducer, which uses a deflector plate to distribute sound equally in all directions. Compared to the aging SoundLink Mini II, the SoundLink Revolve sounds almost as good but can’t match the expansive soundstage and instrumental separation of the Mini II – though, admittedly both speakers sound very good and you’ll be hard pressed to notice the difference unless you listen to them side by side. Both the Color II and Revolve are IPX4 rated, which means they’ll survive splashes but you won’t want to dunk either speaker in the pool.
If bass is your game, the JBL Charge 3 is an excellent fully waterproof speaker that sounds great, but is big and heavy along with it.
Review: Bose Soundlink Revolve II and Bose Revolve + II
I had some small troubles with those speakers, so when I heard Bose had announced a 2nd generation of the Revolve line more than 5 years after launching the originals, I knew I wanted to test them out to see if they’ve made improvements. The main differences are the size, battery life and volume, and of course price – which we’ll get to. The first thing I noticed is that the speakers don’t arrive charged, which is a bit of a disappointment and means you’ll need to wait 4 hours before your first use. Even so you can set these speakers up in seconds; when you turn them on, they go into pairing mode and you’ll find them instantly in your phone’s Bluetooth menu.
Bose’s app give you a few additional features for your speakers including the ability to pair them together for stereo left and right channels, or set them up in what’s called party mode where the same sound will play across multiple speakers. Verbal confirmations (which you can enable or disable inside the app) follow from the speaker. Each of the layers—the high, the mids and the low end— feel like they each have their own place in the room and overall they sound really really great. At 75% volume on the Revolve +II the sound filled the huge open concept living room and kitchen and carrying on a conversation was impossible.
Stereo pairing is a really nice way to get more immersive sound if you do want to splash out and get two speakers. While this is probably not a make or break feature for some shoppers, I do feel like giving consumers the option to add voice control is now table stakes, so the fact that it doesn’t have voice control makes it feel a bit lacking. I tested this out, placing the speaker on one end of the house and then going to the other, putting multiple walls between me and the Revolve. In my opinion after testing both, you can be very happy with the size, power and room-filling ability of the smaller, less expensive Bose Revolve II and save yourself some cash.
Overall I’m glad to see that these speakers are small but powerful with outstanding sound quality and easy set up, pairing and multi-room connections. There’s no native voice control or smart speaker connections, and the battery life could be longer, particularly at this price point.
Bose SoundLink Revolve review: Mini Bluetooth speaker, maximum sound
The Google Home however feels cheap in comparison to the Bose: It weighs less, doesn’t have an integrated battery and must be plugged into a power source. While the Revolve seems at first glance more like an indoor speaker, it’s both water- as well as shock-resistant and is designed with outdoor use in mind. Enlarge Image The buttons on top of the speaker control playback and volume.
As I stated previously, there are a lot of cylindrical shaped speakers out there, and the Revolve’s biggest competitors include the UE Boom 2, UE Wonderboom, JBL Flip 4 and JBL Charge 3 (a Charge 4 is on the way).
It also beats the higher priced UE Boom 2 and B&O Play’s hamburger-sized Beoplay A1, which costs $250 (£199, AU$379) and sounds very good for its size. The Revolve is only capable of so much, and can’t quite escape the boundaries inherent in streaming audio over Bluetooth to a small speaker.
What separates the Bose from its competitors is the ability play a little louder, put out more bass without distorting and sound a little more natural with decent detail. For example, UE’s Wonderboom, which retails for a third of the price and is an excellent mini Bluetooth speaker, stumbled over parts of the bass line in the Shaun Frank remix of The Chainsmokers’ “Closer.” Audiophiles will find fault with the Revolve’s sound, particularly compared to wired $200 speakers. But the vast majority of people will think it’s a great sounding little speaker that can be easily moved from room to room or carried outside, where it can fill a patio area with sound — maybe not at dance party-level, but certainly at background music volumes.
As I said, I personally find myself leaning towards spending the extra dough on the SoundLink Revolve Plus, but if you don’t need that extra bit of fullness and volume, you’ll be quite happy saving some money with the Revolve.
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