The Sony Ericsson HCB-120 is a Bluetooth hands-free speakerphone that is designed for use in either the office or a car, and is the upgrade to the previous HCB-100. Once again boasting above average sound quality, as well as the ability to connect with up to five mobile phones, the HCB-120 adds a small display to show caller ID information. Unfortunately, the price is a little steep.
The HCB-120 includes a visor clip to mount in your car. It supports Bluetooth 1.2 and will work with any mobile phone that supports Bluetooth headsets. For use in an office, the HCB-120 can be placed on a desk and used just as you would in a car. Sony Ericsson has done away with the flip up microphone used in the HCB-100, this time building it into the unit itself.
Like the previous model, the HCB-120 controls are well laid out and marked. There are four buttons; a call key, end/power key, and two others - one to mute the microphone during a call and turn on Bluetooth pairing mode, and the other to switch between the five Bluetooth profiles available and change the colour of the display. You can assign a different colour to show you which of the five available profiles are being used using the convenient volume control; of course, this dial also adjusts ringing and in-call volume levels.
The display is tilted, so it can be viewed at various angles without suffering from a poor viewing angle. As well as showing caller ID information, the display shows battery life, volume control, pairing mode and any settings you can adjust. During testing, the display is viewable in all lighting conditions, but annoyingly, the caller ID information takes a few seconds to appear on the display when the phone rings.
The HCB-120 functions much like a standard Bluetooth headset. Calls can be answered or rejected at the touch of a button. Pressing the call key enables voice dialling (if supported by your mobile phone), while pressing twice redials. Audio quality is reasonable, but not outstanding. We didn't experience any echo or poor voice quality, so as long as our car windows were closed. We didn't notice a difference in quality between the flip-out microphone of the previous model, and the built in one here.
The HCB-120 measures 96mm x 77mm x 22mm and weighs 110g. Sony Ericsson has improved battery life over the HCB-100, as the unit is rated at up to 24 hours of talk time and 450 hours of standby time. The unit is charged via the included car charger and once again, it automatically turns off after 10 minutes without a connection, saving valuable battery life.
-
Motorola MOTOROKR S9 HD Bluetooth headset
RRP: $159.00 -
Samsung HKT600 Bluetooth speakerphone
RRP: $99.00 -
Jabra SP200 Bluetooth speakerphone
RRP: TBA -
Proporta Italian Job iPhone case
RRP: $26.25 -
Sony Ericsson MBW-200 Bluetooth watch
RRP: $849.00
-
Jabra SP200 Bluetooth speakerphone
RRP: TBA -
BlueAnt Z9i Bluetooth headset
RRP: $99.00 -
Sony Ericsson MBS-200 Wireless Portable Speaker
RRP: $199.00 -
Sony Ericsson HBH-PV720
RRP: $109.00 -
Sony Ericsson MBS-100
RRP: $108.00
iPhone 3G S - Yay or Nay?
Now that Apple has unveiled the iPhone 3G S, what do you think? If you are a current ...
iPhone
i am wondering whether i should purchase an iphone as there may be a new model coming ...
why not the iMate
been with you a long time...first forum topic... Why not the imate Ultimate 9502 ...
Verbatim Announces SSD ExpressCards for PC and Mac Users 2009-07-06 14:26:00+10
Verbatim lets data sprint with launch of eSATA Combo Hard Drives 2009-07-06 14:23:00+10
KORDZ punts on US home cinema market turn around 2009-07-06 12:20:00+10
Challenge Your Memory with Kingston and Win Hot Memory Products Home 2009-07-03 12:20:00+10
Get real time traffic updates from Nokias Ovi Maps for mobile devices and for web 2009-07-03 10:34:00+10












