Baseus Brand Store via Amazon[amazon.com] has for Prime Members: Baseus Bowie MC1 Pro Open Ear Clip-On Headphones (Black, Titanium, or White) for $63.99 - $14.08 when you apply promo code 3Q2QWFC5 at checkout = $49.91. Shipping is free.
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Baseus Brand Store via Amazon[amazon.com] has for Prime Members: Baseus Bowie MC1 Pro Open Ear Clip-On Headphones (Black, Titanium, or White) for $63.99 - $14.08 when you apply promo code 3Q2QWFC5 at checkout = $49.91. Shipping is free.
Model: Baseus Bowie MC1 Pro Open Ear Clip-On Headphones, Hi-Res LDAC & HiFi4 Acoustic Sound, 5g Ultra-Lightweight Comfort, SuperBass 2.0, DNN 4-Mic AI Clear Calls, IP67 Waterproof, Bluetooth 6.0
Deal History
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
Just got the MC1 Pro in the mail and have been testing them against the regular MC1 model. Honestly, the differences are pretty minimal so far. They feel almost identical in weight—even though the Pro is technically a bit lighter, you probably wouldn't notice it. The case is a little more curved, which is a nice touch.Sound quality while walking around is decent, about the same as the non-Pro. My main complaint with the regular version was that anything over 80% volume caused cracking and distortion. That's still something I'm keeping an ear on with the Pro.Another issue I had with the original was how quickly the left earbud got clogged—after just a few weeks, the sound was noticeably quieter. Traditional earbuds usually don't have that problem so soon. The Pro model seems a bit more water-resistant, so I'm hopeful it'll be easier to clean if that happens again. I'll have a better idea after a month or two of regular use.
I received these today to compare against the Soundcore AeroClip and the Shokz OpenDots One - all similarly styled earbuds.
TLDR: Get the Soundcore AeroClip at the current Prime sale price
Both the Soundcore AeroClip and Shokz OpenDots have superior sound quality to the MC1 Pros. I wasn't much a fan of the build quality (seemed of cheap plastic) nor the fit of these earbuds. Between the Soundcore and Shokz, they had great volume and sound quality (listening at ~60% volume, individual instruments can be easily distinguished). The Shokz advertises Dolby audio, but with the way these earbuds sit on our ears allowing ambient sounds in, I couldn't tell much of a difference between Dolby off vs Dolby on, yet the Soundcore held its own even without the Dolby marketing. I did prefer the customizable controls of the Soundcore (you can customize double and triple tap actions for each earbud from a wide selection of commands) as opposed to Shokz (can only customize the squeeze gesture with limited commands). The wireless charging for the Shokz case is nice, but nothing groundbreaking. Latency was minimal across all three earbuds. There were a few extra perks for the Shokz (the earbuds are ambidextrous and seem to have sensors to know which side of your head they're on to correctly route left-right channels, and there's auto-pause detection), but these perks didn't justify the extra cost for me. At the current sales prices, I'm keeping the Soundcore AeroClip. If both the Soundcore and Shokz were at a similar price, then I'd stick with the Shokz.
Prices when I reviewed each of these...
MC1 Pros: $53, Soundcore AeroClip: $120, Shokz OpenDots ONE: $180
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TLDR: Get the Soundcore AeroClip at the current Prime sale price
Both the Soundcore AeroClip and Shokz OpenDots have superior sound quality to the MC1 Pros. I wasn't much a fan of the build quality (seemed of cheap plastic) nor the fit of these earbuds. Between the Soundcore and Shokz, they had great volume and sound quality (listening at ~60% volume, individual instruments can be easily distinguished). The Shokz advertises Dolby audio, but with the way these earbuds sit on our ears allowing ambient sounds in, I couldn't tell much of a difference between Dolby off vs Dolby on, yet the Soundcore held its own even without the Dolby marketing. I did prefer the customizable controls of the Soundcore (you can customize double and triple tap actions for each earbud from a wide selection of commands) as opposed to Shokz (can only customize the squeeze gesture with limited commands). The wireless charging for the Shokz case is nice, but nothing groundbreaking. Latency was minimal across all three earbuds. There were a few extra perks for the Shokz (the earbuds are ambidextrous and seem to have sensors to know which side of your head they're on to correctly route left-right channels, and there's auto-pause detection), but these perks didn't justify the extra cost for me. At the current sales prices, I'm keeping the Soundcore AeroClip. If both the Soundcore and Shokz were at a similar price, then I'd stick with the Shokz.
Prices when I reviewed each of these...
MC1 Pros: $53, Soundcore AeroClip: $120, Shokz OpenDots ONE: $180
Leave a Comment