Top positive review
55 people found this helpful
This is the One
By Linkin24 on Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2018
I'm a very experienced Bluetooth portable speaker fanatic and music is my passion. I am guilty of literally buying (or borrowing from a friend) every top rated Bluetooth speaker and putting them up against each other to figure out which one has the best sound quality as that is the feature I value the most. Below I review several Bluetooth speakers in 2 different categories, small-form and large form. If you're only interested in the Aiwa Exos-9 Review, please skip the small-form section below and go straight to large form. Also, in the reviews below, I don't mean to infer that higher wattage means louder sound as I know this is not true. But actually in terms of these speakers I tested it did seem to hold true. I just wanted to include the RMS for a key metric point when comparing. Small-Form Portable Bluetooth Speakers As far as smaller form factor portable Bluetooth speakers, the JBL Extreme is the best and is the one I kept. The only caveat is that some people wouldn't consider the JBL Extreme as small form factor and might put it in the small-mid category. Here are the top 3 after testing them side-by-side: 1. JBL Extreme (I own this so I have not tried the Extreme 2 but I'm sure it's very similar or better.) By far the loudest, best overall sound quality, and best bass. Great sound quality for all genres of music. Produces 40w of power and 56w peak! Rating: 9/10 2. At #2 is the Marshall Kilburn - This is much larger than the JBL Extreme so less portable. Rock music sounds the best on this unit while other genres aren't as good but still above average good sound quality. The vintage look is pretty cool too. It didn't get as loud as I would expect and produces power in the 25-30w range. Rating: 8/10 3. Bose Soundlink Mini ii - Ultra portable, very small form factor and produces very good sound quality for how tiny it is. No Bluetooth speaker near this size produces better bass than this (JBL Extreme and Marshall produce much better bass but they are also many times the size of this). However, it doesn't get nearly as loud as I would like and the sound quality quickly distorts at 90%+ volume and sounds like garbage. 12 watts of power but you can't expect much power for how small this is. Rating: 7.5/10 I also tried the UE MegaBoom and have to say the sound quality is pretty bad for how highly rated this is. Its only advantages are it does get loud (produces 36w total) and is rugged and waterproof. It doesn't deserve to be ranked at all but worth mentioning. Now, I never thought I would go bigger than the JBL Extreme for "Portable" Bluetooth speakers until I was gifted a Monster Rockin Roller Mini for Christmas. This thing put my JBL Extreme to shame in loudness and battery life and now my JBL is collecting dust. The JBL Extreme will come out only when I travel via an airplane for work/vacations as it can still easily fit in my luggage. The sound quality on the Monster is actually pretty damn good for a unit that is 1/2 the cost of JBL Extreme! That got me intrigued to now find the best portable Bluetooth speaker in the mid-large category. Also, I saw JBL came out with a much larger version of the Extreme called the JBL Boombox and I was extremely interested in it since it had to be much better than my much loved Extreme. However, a YouTube video by Unbox Therapy is what put the Aiwa Exos-9 on my radar as I had never heard of the model before but remember Aiwa boomboxes as a kid in the 90s looking at Christmas magazines from JC Penney. That YouTube reviewer's reaction is what made me instantly go out and purchase the Aiwa. Here are the top large form factor portable Bluetooth speakers in their respective orders after testing them side-by-side against each other: Large-Form Portable Bluetooth Speakers 1. Aiwa Exos-9 - $299 - One word. WOW! 4 more words. This is the One. The Quote they put on the box is perfect as you're opening it up for the first time - Goodbye to "Good Enough". I just purchased this at the end of June. There is not another portable Bluetooth speaker (small-large form) that sounds as good as this. The clarity is unbelievable. There is no distortion at max levels like most speakers have issues with. There is not a louder speaker (200w of power!) and I brought this to a Beer Olympics party outside and everyone was blown away and jamming out all day. The bass this speaker produces is unmatched by anything in its price range. The built-in equalizer options are an amazing touch (I like preset 2 the best for most genres) and allow me to not have to mess with my third party Android Equalizer App. I'm in love with this speaker and my wife is super jealous of this new relationship. I'm now looking to buy the extended battery and the carrying case to protect it. I kind of wish there were more case options and colors but that is not a con of this speaker. Thank you Aiwa for ending my search to find the perfect speaker and pleasing my ears with your product! The only thing that could make it better is waterproofing it and making it a bit more rugged (the case will probably help with some of this since its splash proof). Rating: 9.5/10 2. Monster Rockin Roller Mini - For ~$100-$140 this is the best value speaker out there. It gets very loud (60w of RMS) and has surprisingly good sound quality. The 36 hour battery life is unmatched and I go several weeks before I need a charge and I listen to music several hours a day every single day. To my surprise this sounds 200x better both in sound quality and loudness than the Sony i have listed at #4 which retails for $349. Insane value here. This even is on par with the JBL Boombox sound quality which retails for $449! It's also water resistant and rugged. However, the Awai Exos-9 is much superior in sound quality, clarity, bass, and loudness and it's not close. I'll repeat this is the best value speaker though. You even get a microphone and it has a guitar hookup and FM radio. I will keep this for events where I don't care if it gets banged up or drinks spilled on. Should have used it for the Beer Olympics event i mentioned above but I wanted to show off the Aiwa too much instead 😀 Rating: 8/10 3. JBL Boombox - $449- This is the speaker I was most excited for due to my great experience with the much smaller JBL Extreme that I mention above (#1 small form speaker). I wanted this speaker to be "The One" so bad as it had the rugged/waterproof features plus a more convenient handle that Aiwa Exos-9 lacks. You can literally throw this thing in a pool if you wanted too. What a disappointment though. While the sound quality on the JBL Boombox is pretty good (#2 overall), it was that much further behind the Aiwa! The bass I was most disappointed in as I was expecting it to be on par with Aiwa since it has 2 large 4'' woofers on the sides and 2 passive radiators. The bass this produced wasn't even close to Aiwa's level. Even the loudness was pretty disappointing - it produces 60W RMS power while Aiwa Exos-9 is almost 4x that with 200 watts. The Monster Rockin Roller Mini also produces 60 watts and it even sounds louder than the JBL Boobox! Even more astonishing is the 1/4 sized JBL Extreme produces 40w of power and 56w peak! For a retail price of $449 it's much more expensive for such inferior sound quality and on par with the Monster's sound quality. Rating: 7/10 4. Sony XB-60 - $349 - The only reason I gave this thing a shot was that it caught my eye in Best Buy due to the flashing lights and the built-in demo. I'm also a huge fan of the Sony MDR-1000X Noise Canceling headphones which are the #1 NC cans with Bose QC35 slightly in 2nd (feel free to send me some Aiwa cans to compare too 😁).The demo built-into the unit actually didn't sound bad at all and got really loud in the store. I brought it home and the sound quality was junk. Also, the volume never got to the demo's level that I heard in the noisy store vs. what I heard in a quiet home. Each speaker only gives 15 watts of power each which explains the lack of power. The sound quality is absolutely horrible. This is also the heaviest of them all at 17.64lbs. The battery life on high volumes was very poor and I maybe got 2 hours with a full charge. The flashing LED lights are maybe the only good thing about this speaker and I liked the option to turn that feature off or customize the colors (although 2 DIFFERENT apps are required for this - WHAT?). Although I'm 31 years old, I think this speaker is marketed and geared towards teens and young adults who don't care about sound quality just as the UE Megaboom is in my opinion. Rating: 4/10 I just wanted to give everyone my experiences in case anyone had that "what if" thought of there being a better speaker in the sub $800 level. I can unequivocally tell you there is not a better sounding speaker than the Aiwa Exos-9. Also thank you Aiwa for producing this speaker. I listen to music ~8-10 hours a day, every single day. I love music and this speaker has made this passion of mine even more enjoyable! You have made me a customer for life!
Top critical review
58 people found this helpful
Aiwa Exos-9 Has a Place Among My Stereo.
By Reina Family on Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2016
Hi to all, I wanted to say that I am very happy with this blutooth speaker, I never thought I would sound so good. I don't usually do reviews, but this one deserves it. First of all I love music and I do have a decent sound system at home that consist in Sansui amplifier AU-G99X, Equalizer Audio Source EQ200, Otari MTR10 and Otari MX-55 Reel to Reel Machines( this is where I put my favorite tracks), Onkio Turntable CP-1260F, and Cerwin Vega VE-15 speakers as my Stereo set up just to mention a few; nothing fancy, but this combination makes a very good sound and I can play any genre of music with it and I do have a wide taste in music ..........My surround system consist of Onkio TX SR804 7.1 Receiver, Cerwin Vega E-712 as my front speakers and JBL Studio Series Surround speakers; and JBL PB12 Sub. Nothing here is too expensive ,but carefully selected for good surround music, movies etc. To me is all about the sound and the right combination, not the brand or fancy features, etc. I have listen to many very expensive systems out there and many of them sound horrible and set up in the wrong way. To me an EQ is essential, because for the simple fact that music should sound the closes way to live as possible. Music is recorded with the flattest frequency response possible to maintain it's quality, but that does not mean it should be listening that way. As a matter of fact I refuse to listen to music that way Try to listen to a good Jazz song the way it comes out of a CD(Flat), pure and you are simply missing the deppness and bass that characterize Jazz in general. Now go to a Jazz concert and you will experience something totally different. The deepness and sound stage is there and no-one can take that away from those instruments. That is why live music sounds so good when it's played with quality. Every instrument has an specific sound and believe me the Piano has a way different level that the bass, or vocals, saxophone, etc and no of those have a flat freq response at a live level. Now music on Vinyl sounds better because it comes with a different EQ wave level, and away from flat response. I don't EQ the music on my vinyls for the same reason. The Aiwa Exos-9 comes with 5 band EQ, that I believe is Key and why it can sound so good(40 Hz on the main Woofer is low enough, you can't spect more) and one of the main reason I bought it. I've been looking for a bluetooth speakers for the longest time and nothing out there was good enough, always lacking of the same important thing, volume, sound quality, deepness and soundstage. I though it was impossible, I almost gave up on my search. Aiwa Change all that with the Exos-9, I could not believe those specs, I had to buy it and hear for myself. This speaker can even be firmware upgraded to make it sound better( I know a new firmware update is in development for better sound, among other things) I am pretty sure there is a high level of engineering behind this, but even more old school minds that knows sound and the way music should sound. This bluetooth speaker has a place among my Stereo and gears. I will with no doubt buy a second speaker to link them and see what's up. I know they will never sound like my current system, but for it's size and quality it does the Job very well away from home. I have shown the speaker to others and they've been impressed for the quality and even more the price tag. I am so glad you broke the barrier of the micro speaker. "No Small Speaker Will Sound The Way Music Should Be Heard"( I said that). I want to Thank Aiwa for making music sound good from this amazing speaker; keep it up, never smaller, you are in the right track. When it comes to sound bigger is better. Update Review 08/29/21 After 5 years of use I have found a known problem with the unit. Looks like other people have had the same issue with only a few month of use and also barely new units. Looks like when you crank the Eq, specially the 2 bass levels to the max and at high volumes the unit might quit and stop working. That happened to me for the first time, since I have never had to do that. Reason I did crank the 2 bass levels to the max , because I was working in the yard, was all over the place and wanted to hear the bass further. I wonder if it would have done that before, again first time I did that with the eq levels After it turned off by itself, it would not turn on, even when plugged in. I plugged it in for many hours, took the battery out and in again and nothing. After a whole day I tried again to connect it to power and it did turn on this time and started charging again and working like nothing ever happened. Looks to me they know about the issues, but when contacted customer service, all sounded too weird. I will try to duplicate the issue and if it happens again and they don’t fix it for free, then I won’t order more from them. Don’t get me wrong, I really like the Exos-9 and it is to me one of the best if not the best sounding Bluetooth speakers out there.
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