Hello groups. My company provided us with a LG 5300 model phones. I noticed
this phone is Bluetooth capable so I went to a Verizon store and the rep
told me to purchase the Motorola H500 BT (49.99). I went home to charged the
it (3 hours) until light went off. I then paired it up my phone according to
the manual. Made 6 phone calls and everyone I talked to said that their
voice is echoing. On my end, I heard them loud and clear. I played around
with the volumes on the phone and Bluetooth unit and still no change. The
next day while I was driving to work I called the Motorola company (on
manual) and to help me troubleshoot the problem. Even the rep heard the
echoing and sis not have an answer for me. She suggested to bring it back to
the store. After work I went back to the store and returned it and explained
to rep what was happening. I then purchased the Jabra JBT150 model. Again,
did the same thing to (charged + pair) made a few calls and it worked fine.
The 3rd call started to echo to the person I was speaking to. Now I had this
model for 3 days no and it worked 5 times out of 8. What is causing this?
What model is recommended to use? Also, Is there a good Bluetooth out here
that is a bit smaller? This one wobbles and looks like a huge roach on my
ear. (lol) thanks for your time.
Jeff
PeteS - 05 Sep 2006 14:47 GMT
> Hello groups. My company provided us with a LG 5300 model phones. I noticed
> this phone is Bluetooth capable so I went to a Verizon store and the rep
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
> Jeff
Cell phones have built-in echo cancellers that are normally switched
off when you link to an external headset (be it bluetooth or anything
else). Bluetooth headsets, in general, do _not_ have echo cancellers as
there is no expectation of acoustic coupling from the earpiece (which
should be embedded in your ear) and the microphone.
(Echo cancellers are not the same as noise cancellers)
If the earpiece is set quite loud and is _not_ properly fitted in your
ear (as you hint at), then there will be some acoustic coupling and
bingo, you have echo around your bluetooth headset.
Cheers
PeteS
sonata32 - 06 Sep 2006 12:37 GMT
Pete,
Thanks for the detailed info. Very interesting
Jeff
>> Hello groups. My company provided us with a LG 5300 model phones. I
>> noticed
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>
> PeteS
Frank H - 05 Sep 2006 16:41 GMT
>Hello groups. My company provided us with a LG 5300 model phones. I noticed
>this phone is Bluetooth capable so I went to a Verizon store and the rep
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>
>Jeff
Hello Jeff,
I ran into pretty much the same thing here. I had no previous
bluetooth knowledge, but I felt it was a tangle free way to use a
hands free setup.
Bought the same motorola H500, had this echo, and others said it
sounded to them as if I was driving past a fence.
I returned the head set for a Jabra X-10, same or similar result.
Then I was told about the NXZEN 5000 by Gennum.
Wow, it uses two mikes, and some advanced noise cancelling.
I purchased one. Did the charging and the pairing.
It works perfectly, and without any sound problems. No echo, no fence
effect at all. It is like I am speaking person to person.
On their web site they have sound samples for you to hear and even
download. It is quite impressive. I love this thing. It is a keeper!
Hope this helps.
Cheers, Frank BC Canada
sonata32 - 06 Sep 2006 12:37 GMT
Frank,
Thanks so much. I will oder it today. Best price I found via online is
116.00. Is it cheaper anywhere else?
Jeff
>>Hello groups. My company provided us with a LG 5300 model phones. I
>>noticed
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>
> Cheers, Frank BC Canada