Pairing is very simple, still pressing the multifunction button in the middle until the LED flashes red and blue. It is recognized by the HV-805 designation. Then just hold down a big second subsequent times. To lower or raise the volume, we must remain pressing buttons (this does not work in small jerky keys) and a steady beep until you reach the minimum or the maximum or a big beep. A simple press will change the track. The middle button lets you take a call or to break if it is in music mode. If we want to reject the call, you must press the button twice. Once the call ends, the music resumes where it left off. The system is easy to handle.
His side, the helmet is doing quite well but not perfect. I found its balanced enough for my amateur use, with low enough present. However, I find the sound a bit muffled and tends to saturate when you push the volume to its limits, which rarely happens with this kind of helmet. Once in place, the atria hold well (with the fins for me) and the ribbon cable behind is a good idea since it avoids the tangled. On appeal, the quality also seems to go even if the wind mingled with my test, making the conversation more difficult (the joys of cycling!). Autonomy is a bit disappointing, with only 4:00 announced.
These headphones are a perfect sport companion if we try to get rid of the wire. We still regret the rather bland design and the ubiquitous black.
Pros: - Value - Ideal for sports - Switches off automatically when Bluetooth off
Cons: - Quality of finish (rough plastic) - Sound that tends to saturate at maximum volume - Design "Soviet"