Apple AirPods At Half The Price? My Liberty Air Earbuds Review

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Six months ago I was reviewing my experience with another Anker 'Soundcore' earbud product, the Liberty Lites. I liked these, and they quickly became my everyday audio companion while out on my long walks in the Yorkshire countryside. I did, however, have some issues with the volume never being quite loud enough and ultimately the three hour playtime ended up being just not enough for long train travel or flights. So, I started looking at the alternatives. Naturally I started looking at the likes of the Apple AirPods (once I had discovered you can use them with Android phones) and the new Samsung Galaxy Buds. Both look really cool and feature 'true-wireless' connectivity plus super battery life. Unfortunately, both also break my 'never gonna pay more than £100 for freakin' earbuds man' rule; and then some.

Then I stumbled across one of the best kept secrets out there: Anker also sell true-wireless AirPod look-a-like earbuds and they come in at well under the £100. In fact, they cost just £79.99 here in the UK. Actually, scrap the 'just' as in the US they are $79.99 which at the current exchange rate is about £61. At that price they would be an absolute bargain, but even at a shade under £80 they are still half the cost of AirPods with the standard charging case (AirPods with a wireless charging case cost 2.5 times as much!) and the pre-order price on the Galaxy Buds is £139 so not a great deal better. I took the plunge and grabbed a pair of Liberty Air earbuds, here's how that turned out.

Look and Feel

These look, erm, suspiciously similar to AirPods. Especially in white, and you'd have to be standing pretty close (and staring into my earhole) to notice the soundcore logo. The charging case is equally Apple-like. That's not a bad thing, the AirPods have set the bar for earbud design and have something of an iconic status attached to them. They don't feel the same though, perhaps understandably being a little less premium quality in the shiny plastic finish. In the ear they feel fine, light and once you've selected the right pair of tips from the four supplied you get a nice tight fit. The case is a small pebble-shaped one, the same glossy plastic, but small and I prefer this to the larger case supplied with my Liberty Lites.

Sound quality

Forget the looks, it's really all about the audio isn't it - otherwise you might just as well go for a coke can and string approach to listening to your music. Whereas I thought the Liberty Lites were a little underpowered on the volume front, I have no such reservations here. In fact, the sound quality pretty much blew me away. Hands up, I'm not audiophile, but these played everything I threw at them with a genuinely good reproduction and that's from heavy rock to acoustic vocals, opera and classical. The graphene-enhanced technology certainly seems to deliver on the marketing promise in my opinion. Equally important, the call quality was decent enough as well. Not that I take calls as I'm phone-phobic (fact!) but I do speak to my partner throughout the day and she had no difficulty hearing me, nor me her, under all conditions including a noisy train journey.

Battery life

This is one of the areas I was looking for improvement over the Liberty Lite buds, and I got it. While Galaxy Buds offer 6 hours playtime (unverified at this stage) the Liberty Air matches AirPods with 5 hours. In fact, over the course of a few weeks actually using the things every day I can confirm I get a real-world, high volume, 4.5 hours out of them before they need to go back into the case for a charge. The case will add a further three charging cycles, so I get a total of 18 hours without going near the USB cable. The micro-USB cable that is; c'mon Anker, get with the times and give us USB-C why don't you? I've long since moved over to USB-C so having to dig out a micro-USB cable is a pain in the ass. But maybe that's just me.

Touch controls

Ah, here's where I have a bit of a grumble. The touch controls are OK but not great. No volume control still, you have to control that from your smartphone and there's no companion app either. At least the volume is loud enough once you've set it. More of a problem for me and my stubby fat fingers is the fact that I found the touch controls to be a but temperamental and sometimes requiring a second, or even third, attempt to pause or skip. I've got used to it, but wish I didn't have to. I docked a star from the rating as a result of this one thing.

What else?

Well, there's the usual Anker 18 month warranty which is as good as you will get anywhere in my experience. Anker actually do honour these warranties and I've never had any fuss or faff on the very rare occasion I've needed to use their support people. There's also an IPX5 rating for water resistance, which means sweat and rain are not problematical, just don't wear them in the shower, m'kay. There's also Bluetooth 5.0 which has proven to be good on the battery life and equally good on keeping the connection no matter what. I have not experienced one single drop out in all my usage so far. Can't really ask for more than that. The auto-connect stuff all just works, the auto-charging ditto.

For The Record, My Liberty Lite Earbuds Review

I am something of a self-confessed Anker hardware fan. I've been using their cables, power supplies and portable chargers for years now. However, I never really thought of Anker in the audio space, until now. Soundcore is an Anker brand with just audio products out there, as the name suggests. So, I needed some new earphones for my daily multi-mile walks and thought I'd give Soundcore a go. Especially when I saw these 'Liberty Lite' wireless earbuds were so much cheaper than the big brand versions from the likes of Apple, Bose and Samsung. Not that I have an iPhone, I'm currently a Samsung kind of a guy for my sins. Anyway, I took the plunge and as these earbuds have had something of a mixed bag of reviews on Amazon I thought I'd share my experiences with DaniWeb users.

First things first then, the price. Here in the UK, Apple is currently asking a whopping £159 ($200) for a pair of AirPods. Way too expensive an ask for me, especially as I say I don't have an iPhone. OK, so seeing as I do have a Samsung phone what sort of price are a set of the latest Gear IconX earbuds? Erm, amazingly they are even more expensive at £179 ($230) which is the same as a set of Bose SoundSport buds. All far too rich for my blood I'm afraid. There's always the you get what you pay for argument to consider, which is why I wouldn't go near the no-brand £20 a set clones that are all over Amazon. The Liberty Lite's, however, are branded and hit the middle ground when looking at cost: you can currently pick them up at Amazon for £59.99 ($75).

What do you get for your money? Well, what you don't get is the quite the same top-end feel as those other aforementioned products. Yes, you get a charging case but it's very much a hard plastic job and not particularly pleasant to hold. Do I care? Nope, why would I? The thing stays either in my backpack, my pocket or on my bedside table. It works, and works well. Drop the buds in, and they snap into place thanks to the magnetized charging points, and start charging immediately. You get nine hours of charge from the case, with LED indicators on the outside to show the current level as well as LEDs on the buds to show they are charging. That's on top of the three hours the buds hold themselves.

The buds are also a little plasticky, but not so as to be uncomfortable in the ear. Not least as you get a bunch of different ear tips (in sizes ranging from extra small to large) and a bunch of rubberized 'wings' which make for a much nicer touch experience once fitted. More importantly, I was able to find a combination of the two that fit my unhuman-shaped ears really nicely. Comfort has not been an issue even when worn for two hours straight during one of my walks around the West Yorkshire countryside where I live. Nor do I fear that they are going to fall out and I'll watch my investment quite literally go down the drain.

I kind of miss having a volume control, you can only skip backwards and forwards between tracks, pause and take/reject calls with different presses of one or the other buds. Talking of which, I also miss the volume being a bit louder if I'm honest. Yeah, I know, it's not good for me but I'm a big boy now and can deafen myself if I want. Except I can't, at least not with these buds. Don't get me wrong, they are not stupid quiet, far from it. They just aren't as loud as I am used to. They are pretty noise isolating though, which kind makes up for it.

What they are, though, is truly really nice sounding. I was half expecting a compromise on the audio, but was pleasantly surprised to discover a really broad soundstage delivery and a decent amount of warmth in the tone. I've had more detail from headphones, but generally they are going to be closed ear jobbies and costing twice as much as these babies. Again, no complaints from me on the audio quality whether I'm listening to Adele or Five Finger Death Punch!

As for the specs, seeing as we are all tech geeks here, the Liberty Lites don't disappoint either. Bluetooth 5 makes for a reliable connection, and I've not experienced the dropouts I note some buyers on Amazon have complained about. There's the IPX5 'sweat proofing' which is good enough not to worry about a bit of singing in the rain. They aren't waterproof though, so no singing in the shower.