These office headphones outperform their use case. At the price you'll wind up paying for them, they bloody better. Active noise cancellation is great, the audio is slightly better, but these excel at making you heard during online meetings, if you're still attending those. Maybe swing some of the IT division's budget in the direction of a batch of these. For work reasons, of course.
-
Design
-
Build
-
Sound
-
Features
-
Value
When you think of excellent over-ear headphones, you don’t think of laptop and printer maker HP. Maybe you should. The new Poly Voyager Surround 80 UC over-ears surprised us with their audio, proving that you probably shouldn’t judge a product by its sensible cardboard cover.
The Voyager Surround 80 UC overs are marketed as work headphones. Anyone who has worked in an open office is aware of the importance of a great set of office cans. We were expecting… well, office cans – something serviceable enough to keep the surrounding din out and optimised for Zoom meetings but nothing special otherwise. To our surprise, these might be some of our favourite over-ears of 2023. They’re not without their faults, of course, but we’re laying that at the door of Poly not having a massive amount of experience with this format.
Pretty Poly
The left earcup (they’re both marked inside the cup so you don’t mix them up) features little in the way of controls. That’s the fun ear. The right earcup does all of the work. The charge port, power button, and Bluetooth sync control are here. The outer panel of the cup also acts as a touch control. Optimised for Microsoft Teams, you can also use it to play, pause, and navigate your music when not listening to someone with a PowerPoint presentation talking about company overheads.
Actually wearing the Voyager Surround 80 UCs is comfortable enough, even if the headband seemed a little iffy at first, but there is one small problem with the headphones. It might be the only real issue with the Voyager Surround 80 UC, in fact. That would be the power button. It’s entirely and wholly manual, meaning you’ve got to turn this thing off when you stick it into its compact hardshell case. Call us spoiled but for around R8k (these cans aren’t widely available in SA yet) we’d expect them to automatically shut down when the earcups are twisted for storage. Still, HP isn’t that used to this game. We’re sure they’ll get it next time.
Time at the office
You’ll get better results if you use the included BT700 USB-C dongle. It offers a better Bluetooth connection and extended range if you’re the sort to get up from your desk to perform other tasks but are loathe to leave your tunes behind.
Sounds like we need a raise
You can get a little creative with the EQ in the Poly Lens app but we didn’t do much to alter the default sound profile. It handles most of what you can throw at it, from meetings to music to podcasts, without requiring intervention but you might feel the need to adjust the curve a little. You do you.
Adaptive active noise cancellation is a thing here and the Surround 80 UCs are good at what they do. Not as good as Sony or Bose or Jabra, perhaps, but effective enough to (mostly) cancel out the drone of a load-shedding generator.
Circling back to that power button, the Poly Voyager Surround 80 UC cans support up to 24 hours of uptime. That’s an optimistic figure and it’s cut shorter if you’re using the ten-microphone array but you should get at least twenty hours on a charge. If… and that’s a big IF, at least at first… you can remember to turn the bloody things off before you return them to their case.