Crisp Sound, Stylish Design
Define This Unique Speaker
Dissimilar to routine speakers, electrostatic speakers utilize a remarkable engineering that can produce a lot of sound from a level surface, without the need of an expansive space for the sound to resound. They're ordinarily found in homes with multi-thousand-dollar sound frameworks and decent Tvs, and they practically never take the type of convenient Bluetooth speakers. Benq is here to change that with its electrostatic Trevolo speaker framework. It offers the freshness and accuracy frequently connected with electrostatic speakers, however at a much lower cost. Is it a trick? That is begging to be proven wrong, yet the speakers do offer quality, bending free sound. Perfectionists won't cherish the Trevolo's computerized sign transforming (DSP), and bass partners needing a subwoofer-like experience ought to look somewhere else. This is an intriguing speaker framework, however it could likely best be depicted as a high caliber specialty item.DESIGN
The Trevolo is versatile, however not in the pocketable sense; at 6.9 by 3.1 by 5.3 inches (HWD) and 2.6 pounds, its a greater amount of a choice for moving around the house or gathering in a bag than effortlessly convey while on the go. Right away, the speaker seems plain and boxy, however once you open it to uncover the meager electrostatic boards, the framework immediately looks cool.
In case you're new to the idea of electrostatic speakers, they're a lesser-utilized plan that utilizes slender, wide surface zones of boards to task sound instead of the cone-style drivers with which the vast majority of us are well known. Be that as it may most electrostatic speakers experience issues repeating bass frequencies, so electrostatic frameworks have a tendency to work in coupled with a customary driver. Opening the boards on the Trevolo uncovered latent radiators on either side for simply that reason.
The front board houses 18 round cutaway speaker small scale grilles covering two unassuming estimated woofers. At the point when the speaker is open, the woofers sit in the middle of the left and right electrostatic speaker boards. The base of the speaker is lined with a rubber treated material to forestall it from moving crosswise over tabletops.
The top board holds Power, Play/Pause, Listening Mode, and Volume Up/Down catches. (The volume controls cooperate with your Bluetooth gadget's volume, not freely of it.) If you get a telephone call, the Play/Pause and Mode catches go about as Answer and End Call catches, separately. A Bluetooth catch on the back board sets the gadget in matching mode. The included force connector associate at the base of the back board, where you'll additionally discover a 3.5mm Aux yield, a 3.5mm Aux data, and a micro USB association for charging portable gadgets. There is no 3.5mm sound link included, then again.
One thing about the Trevolo's plan that hampers its execution a bit: It's just scarcely calculated upward. This implies that a significant part of the sound you hear won't be adjusted to your ears unless you have the speaker put on a rack, or on a comparatively high surface around your work area when you sit. The contrast between treble reaction at the point when your ears are lined up with the boards and when you're remaining with your ears above them is huge. The blending procedure with an iphone 5s was straightforward and snappy. Benq assesses that the Trevolo has a battery life of 12 hours, yet your results will fluctuate relying upon what volume levels you utilization amid playback.
PERFORMANCE
Beside looking cool, electrostatic speakers are normally known for their clarity. There are three listening modes for the Trevolo: Green is by all accounts the closest thing to a level, unsculpted EQ setting; Blue concentrates all the more on lead vocals and instruments in the high-mids; and Red helps the bass and cuts the treble a bit. Every mode has its own particular benefits, yet we found Green to be the best alternative of the three.
With the boards lined up at ear level and Green mode dynamic, the Trevolo framework sounds phenomenal. There's a freshness to this speaker that takes into consideration more prominent point of interest than you get from numerous correspondingly estimated contenders, in any case bass is not overlooked. The speaker framework additionally utilizes a sound measure of DSP, be that as it may, so exceptional transient tops or overwhelming bass minutes will send the general volume of the framework dipping; this is very perceptible and happens at even unassuming volume levels.
Consequently, on tracks with exceptional sub-bass substance the Trevolo does not misshape; in any case on The Knife's "Quiet Shout," the profound bass electronic pounding of this track sounds more like a finger tapping a table eagerly. The Trevolo additionally just gets around 85 percent as boisterous as most comparatively valued rivalry. It's not a feeble yield, however the Trevolo doesn't impact tunes the way some contending models can. Charge Callahan's "Drover" sounds amazing through the Trevolo. His baritone vocals are warm and rich, with the ideal measure of treble edge in the highmids to guarantee they stay clear and in the spotlight. The drums on this track can frequently sound excessively bass-supported on speaker frameworks that overemphasize the lows, however here the drums take a rearward sitting arrangement to the focal players in the mids and highs—the vocals and the guitar. On Jay-Z and Kanye West's "No Church in the Wild," the kick drum circle gets a lot of high-mid vicinity that helps its sharp assault cut through this occupied blend. It's by a wide margin the most capable sound on this track, with the foreboding subbass synth hits that intersperse the beat sitting further back; we get significantly a greater amount of their rough high-mid top notes than we do the profound, subwoofer component that delivers the goods on all the more capable speakers.
At $300, the Benq Trevolo would feel like an overpriced trick in the event that it didn't sound so great on specific types of music. Blasting bass partners guide clear, and idealists be careful of the DSP, however the Trevolo is justified even despite a listen in the event that you esteem clarity most importantly also.
With the boards lined up at ear level and Green mode dynamic, the Trevolo framework sounds phenomenal. There's a freshness to this speaker that takes into consideration more prominent point of interest than you get from numerous correspondingly estimated contenders, in any case bass is not overlooked. The speaker framework additionally utilizes a sound measure of DSP, be that as it may, so exceptional transient tops or overwhelming bass minutes will send the general volume of the framework dipping; this is very perceptible and happens at even unassuming volume levels.
Consequently, on tracks with exceptional sub-bass substance the Trevolo does not misshape; in any case on The Knife's "Quiet Shout," the profound bass electronic pounding of this track sounds more like a finger tapping a table eagerly. The Trevolo additionally just gets around 85 percent as boisterous as most comparatively valued rivalry. It's not a feeble yield, however the Trevolo doesn't impact tunes the way some contending models can. Charge Callahan's "Drover" sounds amazing through the Trevolo. His baritone vocals are warm and rich, with the ideal measure of treble edge in the highmids to guarantee they stay clear and in the spotlight. The drums on this track can frequently sound excessively bass-supported on speaker frameworks that overemphasize the lows, however here the drums take a rearward sitting arrangement to the focal players in the mids and highs—the vocals and the guitar. On Jay-Z and Kanye West's "No Church in the Wild," the kick drum circle gets a lot of high-mid vicinity that helps its sharp assault cut through this occupied blend. It's by a wide margin the most capable sound on this track, with the foreboding subbass synth hits that intersperse the beat sitting further back; we get significantly a greater amount of their rough high-mid top notes than we do the profound, subwoofer component that delivers the goods on all the more capable speakers.
At $300, the Benq Trevolo would feel like an overpriced trick in the event that it didn't sound so great on specific types of music. Blasting bass partners guide clear, and idealists be careful of the DSP, however the Trevolo is justified even despite a listen in the event that you esteem clarity most importantly also.


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