Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Peak power | 40 W Best: Devialet Phantom Peak power: 4500 W | |||
Weight | 2199.92 g Best: Philips BT2650 Weight: 0.21 g |
Low frequency | 100.0 Hz |
---|---|
High frequency | 0.0 kHz |
Peak power | 40.0 W |
Supported formats |
|
Height | 6.62 in |
---|---|
Width | 14.02 in |
Depth | 6.13 in |
Weight | 77.6 oz |
Docking station for mobile/Tablet | yes |
---|---|
Docking station connection type |
|
Radio receiver | no |
Smart speaker (virtual assistant) | no |
Colour of product |
|
---|
USB | no |
---|---|
Bluetooth | yes |
Bluetooth codec |
|
Bluetooth profile |
|
Analogue 3.5mm input (Aux) | 1 |
Wireless network (Wi-Fi) | no |
Battery operated | no |
---|---|
Electric (not USB) | yes |
Colour: Black No one said it was new, but six years on from its original release and still winning admirers, this dock has staying power and punchy bass to boot. In fact, the 40W sound quality is as good as the robust build, which houses an OLED screen that shows speaker mode, FM radio frequency and EQ presets. You even get a remote in the box, with responsive buttons for EQ modes, volume and playback. The very latest iPhones work well and the dock charges them up in a jiffy. Sony RDP-X200iPN
At this point, we all know that Sony long resisted Apple’s iPhone and iPod but eventually came around once they realized they might be leaving money on the
Sony RDP-XF100iP