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Price
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Battery life
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Features
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Comfort
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Ease of use
If you’ve been exploring the audio landscape for a while, you are bound to have encountered Jabra. The company’s made extensive inroads on the audio front, releasing several great-value wireless earbuds, to the point that the rest of Jabra’s product catalogue has been a bit overshadowed.
But Jabra doesn’t just want to be known for its wireless buds, excellent though they may be. Jabra wants to broaden its appeal, and so here are the Elite 45h wireless over-ear headphones — the little relative to the fantastic Elite 85H. On paper, at least, these seem to have a fighting chance of impressing you. After all, the specification and, especially, the price is right.
But no one ever bought a pair of headphones because of ‘on paper’, did they? So are the Elite 45h actually any good in practice?
Skinny But Strong
There’s not a lot of scope for fancy design fancy when it comes to over-ear headphones, especially not when you’re trying to keep the price down. So it’s really no surprise to find the Elite 45h are probably best described as ‘practical’ in the way they look.
Getting the earcups to sit flat against your ears isn’t as straightforward as it really should be, though, and the approximate nature of the fit means the Elite 45h leak more sound than their closed-back configuration suggests they will. The earpads themselves don’t take long to absorb the heat of your ears, either, and they’re more than happy to give it straight back. But even though the headband feels as if it’s hardly padded at all, it turns out to be perfectly comfortable for hours at a stretch.
Long-Distance Runners
There’s one major feature here, and it’s battery life: the Jabra Elite 45h will go 50 hours between charges. And that’s a completely achievable figure, too – you don’t have to play at low volume or anything like that. 50 hours from a single charge when listening at decent volume. Yes, that’s real.
And even if you’re negligent enough to let the Elite 45h run flat, a 15-minute burst of charging is good for another 10 hours of playback. There’s a USB-C socket on the right earcup, but we doubt you’ll need it all that often – there’s ‘stamina’, and then there’s the Jabra Elite 45h.
Wireless connectivity is via Bluetooth 5, which may not be at the cutting edge these days but is still more than enough to allow you to listen to hi-res digital audio files. And once the information is on board, it’s turned into music by a couple of 40mm dynamic drivers
The Appy Place
Jabra hasn’t skimped where control of the Elite 45h is concerned. On the right earcup there’s a comprehensive interface: a slider for ‘power off/on/Bluetooth pairing’, a three-button strip for ‘volume up/down’, ‘skip forwards/backwards’ and ‘play/pause’, and a button to summon your favourite voice assistant. Google Assistant, Siri and Alexa are all available — there’s a two-mic array in the right earcup for issuing instructions or handling phone-calls.
There’s even a control app, Jabra’s proprietary ‘Sound+’ – as long as you’re running Android 7.0 (or later) or iOS 11.2 (or later), you’re good to go. The app features some EQ presets, some custom EQ adjustment and even a listening test to help establish the EQ levels you should be listening at. There are some other, less compelling, options to make your Jabra experience as personal as you like, too – by the standards of control apps for products like this, Sound+ is both useful and stable.
Loud, Louder, Loudest
A lot of this is going to depend on what the word ‘lively’ means to you. If it has only positive connotations, you’ll get on with Elite 45h like a house on fire. But if it sounds a bit tiring, you might want to sit down for this next bit.
The tonal balance is skewed in this direction, too. At the top end the 45h are never less than edgy, and with unsympathetic content that can get pretty close to being aggressive. The louder you like to listen, the more this trait is emphasised – and while the Sound+ app allows you to back off the treble response just a little, it’s not enough to round off the sharp edges of the Jabra attack.
Down at the bottom of the frequency range the 45h are equally lively – but there’s a rather detached sensation to the way the Jabras serve up the bass. There’s no arguing with how hard they hit or how deep they can dig – but they aren’t the most adept at getting the bottom end to join in with the midrange in an especially natural manner. Like the treble reproduction, bass is nicely detailed and quite believable – it’s just that it sometimes sounds like it’s from a different pair of headphones.
In between, though, this vigorous sonic characteristic really comes into its own. The Jabras tend to make a singer sound like they’re giving it everything they’ve got, so if you want to be moved by a vocalist the 45h will be right up your street. The midrange here is just as detailed as the rest of the frequency range, but there’s a bit more subtlety and nuanced to the way it’s delivered than there is on either side. There’s enough space on the soundstage for a singer to properly stretch out, too, which helps the Jabras sound a little more poised and a little less frenzied than they otherwise would.
Consequently there’s quite a lot of dynamic variation available here – the Jabras start at ‘10’ and take it from there – they’re basically coming from an ‘everything louder than everything else’ position. Which means they’re brilliantly exciting (if you like that sort of approach) or absolutely exhausting (if you don’t).
Jabra Elite 45h Verdict