With every new video that I post I am asked why I don't review the Fugoo XL and compare it to the JBL Xtreme. The answer is simple: because I couldn't get a unit yet. I have been in contact with Fugoo for some time now back when the small Fugoo was released in Europe last year. I also asked about the Fugoo XL immediately when it was announced the first time and was originally promised to receive a unit as soon as they became available. Unfortunately now when they have been finally out in the U.S. for nearly one month, I didn't get any answer about a possible unit anymore. I might have the chance to grab one when it becomes available in Europe which is supposed to be at the end of November, but this may be a bit late for many who are interested and still not sure which speaker will suite them more: Fugoo XL or JBL Xtreme!
As I want to stay as unbiased as possible for my reviews and not count on charities from companies who in return expect positive reviews for their free review samples, I would prefer to buy the speaker on my own. Unfortunately currently I cannot afford buying the Fugoo XL as it is available only in the U.S so far. It would cost me around 480€ including shipping costs, taxes and customs fees to get it to Europe. I already ordered the new and just announced Libratone Zipp Mini some days ago, which seems pretty interesting as well, therefore I cannot buy another speaker right now. That's why I decided to start a kind of donation campaign for a review unit of the new Fugoo XL speaker.
My idea would be to ask for donations to cover the ordering costs of the Fugoo XL in order to be able to prepare an extensive review, make some comparison videos and add it to the audio-database. When everything is done at the end of my review I would of course give the speaker away and raffle it among all those who donated for it. My goal would be to achieve 500$ which would hopefully cover the shipping to Europe with some rest amount so that I can hopefully ship the speaker worldwide to the "winner" who will be chosen at random with some kind of lottery.
Why 500$?
some rough calculation: 300$ - Fugoo XL ~30$ - express shipping to an U.S. address of a friend or myus.com service ~80$ - shipping to Europe + 22% taxes and customs fees _____________________ ~500$
I would like to collect 500$ until the end of October 2015. As soon as 500$ are reached, I will order the Fugoo XL "Style" immediately from Bestbuy or Amazon depending on availability, also because it is the cheapest model while "Sport" doesn't seem to be in stock yet. Then I will hopefully still have enough time for shipping it to Europe and doing my videos including a review etc. If everything works out, my plan would be to have the first videos up in mid November. If 500 people donate 1$ each, the goal would be achieved quickly. I will stop the donation if the amount exceeds 550$, but I need some safety buffer depending on where I will have to ship the speaker afterwards. I have no idea how much shipping might cost to Australia for example!
If I don't manage to achieve 500$ until 1st November I will of course return all payments to the original donators, so there would be no risk for you that I keep the money unjustifiably. If you like the idea and would like to contribute but also to get the chance of winning the Fugoo XL afterwards, please donate through the button below.
(Update: I changed the payment method to paypal.me now, as the with the usual donation procedure paypal charged around 14% fees from the donated amount. This way I will have quite a loss in case I have to refund all donations if the final goal isn't reached. On paypal.me just leave the box at the bottom unchecked, as you don't pay for any goods).
Update 2: donations are closed now, the donation goal was reached, more updates coming soon!
Of course I will prepare Vlogs of any step and goal achieved and post them on Youtube, so that you stay up to date. And at the end there will also be a video of the final tombola, where the official winner of the Fugoo XL will be drawn. Maybe I can even broadcast it "live" through Youtube.
I hope it's obvious that I have no financial interest or profit from this campaign and simply want to contribute my part for anyone interested in the Fugoo XL.
I hope you like this idea and beg for some support.
Prior to the IFA I didn't know much about the Swedish speaker company "Audio Pro". I have seen their Addon T10 speaker quite often when browsing through amazon, but it didn't catch that much of my attention until I discovered their latest announcement of the portable Addon T3 Bluetooth speaker. Someone on Youtube claimed that the T3 sounded so much better so than he had to return his JBL Xtreme, while Whafhifi even awarded the T3 the first place in their Bluetooth speaker group test among other devices like JBL Xtreme, Onkyo X6 etc. And although Whathifi often awards highest ratings to rather mediocre speakers like the B&W T7 or the Cambridge Audio Go V2, I got nevertheless curious about the Addon T3 and thanks to the Austrian distributor Novisgroup I was able to receive a review sample from them, so that I could finally convince myself if this speaker really sounds that great. Jump in to find out more.
After the Canton Musicbox XS, the Audio Pro Addon T3 is my second coverage of the most promising IFA announcements I collected here. The Audio Pro Addon T3 is interesting because of its design. Apart from some funny resemblence of a Koala-bear, while some rather think to see Mickey Mouse in it, it simply looks like a real Hifi-speaker, albeit a shrinked one with an added carrying grip and an internal battery.
Most interesting is the battery life claim, which should be 30 hours at half volume and still some impressive 12 hours at maximum. This would be indeed class-leading. Many companies state their speakers for 20-30 hours, but if you turn them up to maximum or close to that, they will even die after 1 hour. 20 hours of a UE Megaboom become more like 3:20 when played at maximum. Not so with the Addon T3, which indeed should deliver enough energy for a whole day at the beach with some additional hours for the afterparty. But to tell the truth, this is not a speaker I would willingly want to take to the beach. Not only the form factor is a bit disadvantageous for real portable use, but it is simply the finish which I would rather prefer not to get in touch with sand, dirt etc. This is rather a speaker for home-use, but also around the house maybe, not one that I would take with me on trips etc, which is a pity, because the Addon T3 sounds really great, but more on this later.
The Addon T3 is equipped with AptX for best streaming quality, but there is no handsfree or other gimmicks, no voice prompts, no distracting welcome-tones, a real serious speaker. Some may also miss track-controls, or NFC, it doesn't have multipairing etc but is really reduced to the basics of a Bluetooth speaker with more of a puristic approach.
Finish and build quality is great, although the external material is some kind of plastic, but give quite a durable impression. But this is no metal or aluminium, it is some painted plastic and comes within numerous different colours. My test-sample came in orange and was quite an eye-catcher. But as I liked the speaker so much I returned the orange unit and bought my own white one, which fits a bit better into our house.
The first thing that came into my mind when I played around with the T3 was, that it reminded me of the Marshall Kilburn. Not so much on looks, but simply on features, specs and also acoustic design. The Audio Pro Addon T3 looks like a shrinked Marshall Kilburn. It has the same driver layout with one bigger woofer and 2 tweeters, the same power rating of 25 Watts the same bassreflex port and the same battery compartment at the bottom, with exactly the same type of battery built in just arranged differently. Both even have the power supply built in, so you just need a powercable for charging. This cannot be just pure coincidence, but more on that later.
The operation is pretty simple: you get a control panel with a power button along with a bluetooth pairing button, an auxiliary input button and volume buttons, nothing else. If you intend to use the speaker in darkness or elevated on some shelf where you won't see the buttons it is quite hard to determine which one to press to increase volume as they are close to flush with the surrounding panel. The power button has to be kept pressed for a second to turn the speaker or on off. Unfortunately volume control is not synced between streaming device and speaker, but at least it does not have any influence on sound, regardless if you keep the speaker at maximum or the other way round as there is no additional dynamic sound compensation. The T3 sounds always the same independent of the actual volume level with exception of the highest levels, where some intelligend protection circuit starts kicking in and limiting lower frequencies to avoid distortion. The T3 does not provide any sound adjustment as it is the case with the Marshall Kilburn. But to tell the truth, I didn't like the result of both bass and treble dials that much on the Kilburn as the bass dial boosted a range around 150Hz, which I would rather want to take down, and treble was already well defined as well. If you want to change the sound to your liking, you will have to use some kind or EQ-app etc but I don't think it is really necessary.
As already mentioned the battery can be replaced in case it should die after heavy usage, just unscrew 2 torx-wrenches and you will get access to the battery which seems to be a four-pack of 18650 cells. And the Addon T3 can also charge external USB devices in contrast to the Kilburn which didn't provide this option. In this case the T3 delivers 1A at 5V.
My only gripe would regard the strange grip design. It is simply much too narrow to really give any secure hold. I really have to press in my fingers with some force to get a hold, I am not quite convinced about this and hope the grip will maybe become looser after some usage. Apart from nothing to moan about. The feet at the bottom give a bit of cheap "Ikea"-kind of impression, like the sticky protection guards you can buy in any building centre, but this is really no important. The higher front feet help to tilt the speaker slightly upwards, which is of course nice if you listen from above.
When I first listened to the T3 it managed to convince me from the very beginning. It has a nice smooth frequency resposne with a healthy amount of bass which even has some lower response below 50Hz and with very nice mids and wonderfully sparkling treble definition. It simply sounds good and I would get so far to claim that it is one of the best speakers in this class that I have heard so far and close to real Hifi. It sounds comparable to the Marshall Kilburn, but funnily even better. It doesn't have this honkiness of the Kilburn and sounds more restrained overall with even better bass-punch, which surprised me a lot, given the fact that the T3 is even smaller. But overall tuning seems to pretty similar between both speakers as I still think that both are built around equal or similar components, just that Audio Pro squeezes a better result out of it. Of course the T3 is bigger than a B&W T7 or a Soundlink III, but it also sounds considerably better, simply more mature and more serious, without any artificial boosts and sound enhancements. Putting the JBL Xtreme beside, the T3 will sound more natural, far not as bass heavy but with much smoother mids and treble at the same time. At the same time you won't get any loudness compensation. This might of course result in some tinny sound at low levels, but in fact it doesn't. Sure the T3 won't play as full-bodied as the Soundlink Mini at low levels, but it still sounds pretty full and far from tinny, it is just that you won't get this strong bass boost. I especially liked the "kick" that the speaker delivered at normal listening levels, it was able to hit stronger than the JBL Xtreme without this strong bass boost. The T3 holds up pretty well up to 75-80%. It has 50 volume steps and up to step 40 it sounds prefectly clean and meaty without any obvious bass reduction or compression while being free of any kind of distortion, even with some heavier and bassy stuff. Up from there the bass obviously cannot keep up that well and the higher you turn up volume the more the treble will be pushed forwards. At maximum the T3 becomes really treble-heavy, the bass is still there and hits strong, but it is simply softer than the treble. It is not bad and still sounds punchy, it is also comparably loud to the Marshall Kilburn, but sounds more forced also due to some additional limiter that tends to make the sound pump quite a bit with dynamic recordings. If you want best results, I would keep the speaker some notches below maximum. Something you won't get from the T3 is any kind of stereo separation. Only the 2 tweeters have some distance between them, but there is just one woofer, so some left/right separation will be limited to higher frequencies, but from 1 meter away even this will disappear. This is not a severe problem as very few single cabinet manage any real stereo sound at all, so I wouldn't rate this as a negative point. There is simply no way to get a sense for stereo with this design. I only think Geneva Lab has some tricks up in their sleeves with "embracing sound" technology, which they still seem to apply for their latest Aerosphere speakers, although I haven't heard them yet, so I cannot judge how good it works in reality.
If we look at the frequency response measurement of the T3 (orange) especially when put against the Marshall Kilburn (grey) at a medium volume level and at maximum, it is noticeble that both have lots in common. The Marshall is just more boosted in some areas like upper bass and lower treble, but the general tuning is similar between both, although I prefer the more relaxed response of the T3 over the Kilburn:
To give you an idea about the sound of the Addon T3, I prepared a video. I would have liked to put it against the Marshall Kilburn, but as I didn't have any at hand I simply took the JBL Xtreme instead. I think the T3 sounds quite a bit better overall with a more natural sound, nicer sweeter treble response and less artificial bass-boost. Although I must confess that for outdoor listening I definitely preferred the more bass heavy tuning of the Xtreme more, but the T3 is no slouch even outdoors, it is just that it needs a bit of higher levels to really rock, as due to the lack of loudness compensation it might appear a little tinny when played outdoors at low levels.
There's not much not to like about the Audio Pro Addon T3, if you like the looks and don't mind a less portable speaker than those book-sized devices from Bose B&W etc, the T3 is definitely in a league of its own. Soundwise it could be even regarded as some kind of reference in this class, that's also the reason why I bought my own unit and will use this for my future tests and comparisons with other speakers, just keep in mind that you will not get any real sense of stereo, but hardly any of these devices really offers this with exception of those that apply some particular tech like RIVA with their "Trillium" technology or Genvea Lab with "embracing sound". Of course a HK Onyx Studio 2 will sound even more profound than the T3, I think Harman tweaked the sound of the new model quite a bit compared to the old Onyx and Onyx Studio models, as it seems to sound clearer and even fatter than before, at least this is the impression I got. The T3 cannot quite compete with the powerful and more bassy tuning of the Onyx Studio 2, but I think it sounds more natural at the same time. It is smaller, although both are not really suitable to be carried around in a backpack or something, but at least the T3 has really an outstanding battery life in contrast to the Onyx Studio 2. The T3 gets my strong recommendation for anyone looking for true Hifi-like sound in a puristic and portable form-factor. I have yet to hear something much better.
+ great simple design with high built quality + mature and smooth Hifi-like sound + little distortion up to maximum volume + AptX + classleading battery life + battery easily replaceable + no external charger required + no tones, no voice prompts - a bit too large and boxy for transport - grip too narrow for a secure hold - no multipairing - volume control not in sync between speaker and player - strong treble-boost at high levels close to maximum - no loudness compensation at lowest levels
Some time ago the original Jambox became a kind of template for many copycats which started bringing out speakers looking pretty much the same. In the meantime the Bose Soundlink Mini seems to have taken over this role as many companies are simply trying to copy the design and the sound of Bose with mostly just so-so results. Even Bose didn't change much for its Soundlink Mini II, they still pretty much look and sound the same with the same flaws and the same uncontrolled and distorted sound. And although the Soundlink Mini is far from really good sounding many companies still seem to take this as a kind of reference for their own speaker designs with the Canton Musicbox XS being probably the most extreme example I have tried so far. I highly regard Canton as a well established German speaker manufacturer delivering high-quality prodcuts and when I heard about their first Bluetooth speaker that was presented at the IFA I became really curious to hear it in person because it seemed pretty promising. Jump in to find out if the Musicbox XS is just another of these rip-offs or if Canton managed to deliver some really unique product.
The Canton Musicbox XS is the first of Canton's portable Bluetooth speakers lineup. The upcoming one being the Musicbox S, which resembles more of a Sony SRS-X55 design. I am not sure about availability worldwide but in Germany many retailers already offered it shortly after the IFA for 199€.
Actually I like the very simple and boxy "Bauhaus"-aesthetics of Canton's Musicboxes. I prefer this over the rounded and converging edges of the Soundlink Mini. The only part breaking the simple aesthetics is the larger center area or pad containing the oversized Musicbox label which is also acting as NFC-sensor. Although this makes the speaker look a bit cheap, it doesn't feel cheap at all, it is equally well built as the Bose Soundlink Mini with a kind of premium finish and premium materials including a similar rubber foot as the Bose, probably covering the internal battery compartment. But I didn't try to tear the rubber foot away, therefore I am just speculating and cannot even say if the battery is easily replaceable or not as it was the case with the first Soundlink Mini. In the meantime Bose decided to solder the battery directly on to the Soundlink Mini II to prevent an easy user replacement, otherwise the battery would still be easily accessible just not that easily replaceable...
The speaker comes inside a compact box with orange color-accents including an own charger unit and some manuals, but no other accessories. The most intriguing fact is the power rating quoted on the box which says 60 Watts! This is a very bold claim, especially if we remember the rating for the JBL Xtreme being 40 Watts (when run from AC-power) and being able to play twice as loud as the Musicbox XS, this makes Canton appear a bit dubious and I have no idea what they intended with such claims made up out of thin air.
Although the Musicbox XS is equipped with an own Micro-USB port, this is obviously just meant for service or update reasons. Charging has to be done through the included charger which is a bit of a pity, as so many even larger speakers do meanwhile provide the option to be charged through USB.
Although I have heard rumors that Canton might indeed extend this port for charging in future, I think these are just rumors and technically maybe even not possible at all. But it would be definitely great to have the choice for USB-charging as well, even if it took twice as long.
During charging the power button will flash blue to become steady when the unit is charged. In fact nearly all buttons are equipped with an own LED including the Bluetooth-button and the Aux-button. Depending on the action or status some LED will always start flashing or shining and I never quite understood what is going on and why this or that button is currently lit. If you turn off the speaker, the power button will start flashing and continue to do so, although the speaker should be already off... After powering on the speaker usually remains silent and won't play any tones, but a voice prompt will signalize if the speaker is in pairing mode or when it is paired. So far I have not found any way to turn off the voice prompts completely but they are far not as disturbing as some other permanently talking speakers I have already tried.
The Musicbox XS supports Apt-X and multipairing with 2 devices at once. It also supports true wireless stereo with another Musicbox XS, although then multipairing will be disabled. Of course I was not able to try out wireless stereo as I would have needed a second speaker, but pairing is achieved by some combined button presses on both devices which appeared a bit confusing for me when reading about it inside the manual.
There are no track controls available directly through the speaker but at least volume control is mirrored between both iOS devices and speaker. The Musicbox XS has 16 dedicated volume steps which are exactly in-sync with the 16 steps when controlled through the iPhone's volume buttons. This might appear a bit low, as all Bose speakers still allow 100 steps when controlled through the speaker, but the volume curve of the Canton Musicbox XS is nevertheless set pretty sensibly and gives the option for a fine enough control at low levels, something many other speakers don't manage with the first volume steps being either too loud or with jumps between each step being too rough etc.
I had no problems with using the speaker even without having read the manual at all with exception of all the blinking buttons, which I was never quite sure what they tried to tell me, but there is a dedicated long list inside the manual which will reveal all possible meanings for each of the LEDs, depending if they are flashing or steady lit etc. The Musicbox XS seems to have some auto power off which becomes active when the speaker is not in use for 5 minutes. Battery life was pretty impressive as I got 4:05 hours when played at maximum whole the time. This is nearly 1 hour longer than what I got from the Bose Soundlink Mini II, which doesn't even manage to play as loud as the Canton.
Now let's directly jump to the sound of the Musicbox XS and the funny 60W power claim, if it is really true. The first thing I noticed when I played the first notes through the Musicbox XS was that it sounded really familiar which was surprising. After cross checking it was clear that it simply sounded like my 2 year old Soundlink Mini, just a bit clearer, with maybe a hint of better controlled bass, but it was still the same sound signature which could be easily mistaken for the Bose. The Canton Musicbox XS had definitely better treble extension, althouth a bit harsh, but it was also less directional. It didn't suffer that much when not listened exactly on axis, which might hint at a different and improved driver design compared to the Bose, but when listening closer I got more and more disappointed because there were some strange compression effects noticeable with some considerable distortion going on already way below half volume. The compression effects sounded as if the compressor was trying to swallow some parts when a bass note was played together with some stronger bass-drum hit. It simply sounded like a badly setup compression algorithm and you could hear the bass-drum cutting of the bass note. Distortion with bass heavy tracks and some kind of dirtness was something that always bugged me with the Bose Soundlink Mini. Certain tracks become simply unlistenable as you start hearing the drivers or the passive radiators droning. But the Musicbox XS is even more extreme in this regard. Stronger kick-hits or loud bass notes made the music sound terrible all this happening already at lower levels. Although the Canton could play quite a bit louder than the Bose without such obvious dynamic compression, there was a strong bass loss at high levels, which made the overall sound little convincing if high volume is desired. Still it managed to sound better than the Bose, as the Bose struggles with many tracks at high levels due to too strong dynamic processing with transients getting lost completely, while bass being tried to be pushed foward resulting in some stronger pumping effects. Both approaches sound a bit artificial, although I preferred Canton's way as I liked their overall tuning more than the Bose, with slightly less bass boost, but more treble at the same time. But this distortion and strange side-effects of swallowed notes was much more obvious with the Canton than with the Bose. It reminded me of the distortion I got from the Sony SRS-X55 when I asked myself back then how such a speaker could even find its way to the market, the Canton Musicbox XS is similar or even worse than this, therefore I really won't like to lose many further words about it as it is simply not worth it. If you want to hear what I am talking about, check out my video especially when I put the JBL Charge 2 against the Musicbox XS later on for comparison. Where the JBL manages to play 100% free of artefacts and without any distortion (this is latest firmware 1.4.1 btw, the JBL would have struggled with some older firmwares as well), the Musicbox XS creates some completely new instruments and overtones out of the upright acoustic bass or plays just mush when a kickdrum is played unisono together with bass and guitar (click here for German):
Of course as always I did some measurements too. These are nearfield measurements so may not be representative of what you would get in an anechoic chamber from 1m, but as I measure all speakers exactly the same, the differences visible between various units should be still valid. First you can see all available volume steps of the Musicbox XS. There is some bass boost at low levels according to human loudness contours, and some bass loss at high levels starting to be severe from the 10th volume step which is not surprising given the size of the drivers which simply cannot keep up to deliver the same bass amount with higher amplitutes:
Next you can see the Canton Musicbox XS (black) compared to the Bose Soundlink Mini (grey) at a lower volume step at a higher one and at maximum. It is shocking how equal both measurements blend throughout some frequency sections, although the treble advantage and better treble extension of the Musicbox XS is noticeable, they still measure like exactly the same speaker. I have already done measurements from different units of the same speaker that differed more than what is shown here:
I am not sure what to think about the Canton Musicbox XS. If it was released 2 years earlier, I would have been delighted for sure. But actually you get the same Bose sound for the same price, with slighty better treble extension, but with more obvious distortion at the same time... I am disappointed to tell the truth. I am not sure if the Musicbox XS is based on the same acoustic core of the Bose, if both share the same design on purpose or if one is just a blatant rip-off of the other. But when peeking through the grilles of both units which is not that easy with the Canton thanks to the dark color and mesh structure you will nevertheless notice that the passive radiators look exactly the same, you will also see that the drivers are placed within exactly the same distance on both. These similarities cannot be just pure coincidence. Therefore I feel free to claim that what we have here is a German Bose clone, just tuned a bit differently with slighty different electronics etc. I would definitely prefer the clone over the original, as I like the simple looks of the Canton more and the sound has some more air to breathe, but this horrible processing and distortion doesn't make it a speaker worth 200€. Anyone serious about music will not accept this and I am sure even kiddies just interested in playing their techno-tracks will be disappointed by how weird the kick-drums sound on their favorite songs when played through this speaker. Maybe Canton will issue some future update which could minimize the distortion and those strange compression effects, but I can only rate what I have currently in front of me, not what it could be in future. Therefore I would currently not recommend the Canton Musicbox XS over the Bose Soundlink Mini, let alone a JBL Charge 2 or even the cheap Anker A3143 Premium Bluetooth speaker which costs just 1/3 and simply plays cleaner without such obvious artefacts. If you are serious about fidelity and qualitative music reproduction I would rather add 50$ more and go for the upcoming RIVA S. Stay tuned when I can finally get my hands on a final series production unit!
+ minimalistic design and premium finish + nice overall tuning with deep powerful bass and good treble extension + less directional treble dispersion than the Bose Soundlink Mini + loud with less dynamic compression than most competition + support for AptX, NFC, multi pairing and wireless stereo + good battery life - strong noticeable distortion already at levels below half - clumsy dynamic processing killing natural transients - strong bass reduction at high levels - no USB charging - expensive
First of all thanks to anyone who still finds it worthy to donate, I really appreciate any kind of contribution that allows me to cover my expenses. Due to the strong interest I finally ordered the Brookstone Big Blue Party, which I only managed thanks to some income from the amazon-links you can see here. I still had to pay nearly as much for shipping and taxes to get the speaker here, just to let you know that I don't get this stuff for free.
Next I would like to excuse the lack of new posts, but I am a bit behind with my reviews because I got so many interesting speakers that I still have to cover including the Teufel Boomster, the BenQ Trevolo, but also the Aiwa Exos-9. In the meantime I had the chance to test out some further new speakers including the Canton Musicbox XS and the Audio Pro Addon T3 or the Denon Heos-1 and a promising low-budget tip: the Anker Premium Bluetooth speaker. Now it seems as if I will even get some more soon like the long awaited RIVA S, the interesting KEF Muo and hopefully the Fugoo XL. Therefore it is hard for me to keep up with all the reviews. Writing a detailed review takes quite a long time, therefore I am considering to shorten my upcoming reviews a bit, in order to be able to finish more of them.
If you are interested in the latest news, please also check out my Youtube channel regurarly, as I keep that more up-to-date. I have more viewers and subscribers on Youtube, therefore I mostly concentrate on doing videos because these manage to generate 10 times more revenue than my site, otherwise I won't be able to do all this. Although my videos are maybe not best quality, they should nevertheless give you a pretty realistic idea of how the speakers sound as I really set a high value on audio quality. I already prepared some videos of the Teufel Boomster, of the BenQ Trevolo and also several videos covering the Aiwa Exos-9, including a funny loudness test if the Aiwa manages to annoy the whole neighbourhood:
You will also find a very recent sound comparison for the Canton Musicbox XS: (english)(german), and I am currently uploading a video for the Audio Pro Addon T3. Although my speaker database is still in works and far from ready I am nevertheless trying to add new and new speakers. I just added the Canton Musicbox XS and the Brookstone Big Blue Party and I will add the Addon T3 and the Heos-1 next, but still need some time for additional recordings.
So coming up next I will hopefully manage to offer you some new reviews bit by bit. I will try to concentrate on the most newsworthy products that are still hardly covered anywhere yet, and then work off all the rest.
Please be patient and thanks for all your support!