
In the swelling tide of Open headphonesIt can be easy to overlook a subordinate. When Acefast’s Acefit Air first paid attention to me, they seemed like any other pair of budget ear hooks, the basic project for buds that let you listen to tunes keeping your ears open to the world.
I was glad to surprise myself when I got them out of the box, starting with their spy thin loading case wearing sleek slender buds with a touch of metal smell. Acefit Air’s daily activity is similarly satisfactory, marked by responsive controls and Crispa yet hot sound for solid musicality through genres.
These are not the most packed open headphones, and the fitness can be fine, especially when you first stretch the additional hooks through the back of your ears. At $ 80, these disadvantages are easily overlooked, and I had an explosion using these buds through my outdoor activities for several weeks.
Slim and stylin ‘
Photo: Ryan Waniata
There is something completely satisfactory about the case of Acefit Air. When you look at the plastic bubble of the volume box, it looks like any excess clown. This was more impressive to find that it is perhaps the thinnest case of some buds I tested, swallowing easily in jeans or short pockets. The flat-matta ending adds to the vibration, though it tends to collect oil from your skin inside and out over time.
The buds are similarly elegant. Although they weigh about 7.5 grams (the AirPods Pro 2 There are just over 5), they are lighter and less dull than most Earhook buds I tested. Acefast says this is due in part to a “ultra -end titanic wire” within the hooks tested for 10,000 bends. The fitness is so loose and comfortable that you would think they will fall, but they are well balanced and I still have to lose one while walking, walking, cycling or otherwise walking around.
It can be difficult to get the speakers and accompany winds properly aligned with my ears, especially the right one, because of the way the buds are designed for dangerously outside your channels. I got used to it, but I usually need to make some adjustments to the right bud, finding that pulling it forward usually locks the stereo image.
As I put in the buds, I often hear the story of their metal touch sensors, yet Acefast apparently made them unresponsive for the first few seconds, so I rarely make mistakes. Most importantly, unlike many open headphones that I test, the touch pads respond, leaving me easily one tap volume, double tap for gameplay/pause, and a triple tap for singing even in compromise situations like Ebike ride. Just work reliably puts these buds before the game.
Speaking of EbikesThe buds are not the best to overcome wind resistance, but they do a decent job, letting me listen to tunes or podcasts with moderate speeds without the need to blow up my ears. This is a huge advantage of open headphones over traditional buds that depend on microphones that easily overwhelm wind cutting and resistance.
Triple punch
Photo: Ryan Waniata
Within the rubber frame of each bud is a “three-magnetic ultra linear speaker”, which is responsible for the impressive sound quality of the Acefit Air. Acefast says the speakers reduce distortion, and they are very loud to the point that I have rarely pushed them over a third of maximum volume. That’s a good thing because I turned on the EQ in the Acefast app rarely lowers a said volume, but I didn’t find the need to use EQ.