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Jbl onstage iiip
Jbl onstage iiip








jbl onstage iiip
  1. #Jbl onstage iiip drivers
  2. #Jbl onstage iiip full
  3. #Jbl onstage iiip plus

To be clear up front, On Stage IIIP is one of the rare speaker systems that sounds really good straight out of the box. Then there’s the bigger issue of sound quality. As with On Stage 200ID, the digital volume buttons on the front have switched to pressure-sensitive controls rather than capacitive ones, a change for the better. Contrary to some pre-release documentation, and what you might read elsewhere online, this version has neither a rear USB port nor a Dock Connector for synchronization with your computer-a change for the worse.

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First, there’s On Stage IIIP’s back side, which has an audio input and power button next to a power port, plus two rubber-sealed holes and a third that long-time users will recognize as the place that JBL used to include a pass-through Dock Connector port. To the extent that the aforementioned list of major features and differences might inform or simplify your choice between models, it was worth discussing first, but there are a few other points that need to be made about the new On Stage models relative to their predecessors.

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Our full review discusses its pros and cons at length. Finally, On Stage 200ID is the most unusual model in the family it loses portability, using a completely different, wider shape and different speaker drivers. It doesn’t work fully with the iPhone, but is available in a wide array of iPod- and nano-matching colors, and includes a soft carrying bag not included in any other On Stage.

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That $100 model is smaller, with a 6”-diameter housing that holds two small speaker drivers and requires only four AAA batteries.

jbl onstage iiip

Thanks to the new battery compartment and remote control, On Stage III and IIIP have more in common than ever before with the earlier On Stage Micro. Clear dock adapters are included for various iPod and iPhone models.

jbl onstage iiip

And only IIIP has shielding inside for iPhone interference. Cosmetically, the glossy black plastic III and IIIP look the same, except III has a silver metal grille and IIIP has a black metal grille. This remote has volume, track, play/pause and mute controls, plus four buttons to let you navigate an iPod’s menus from afar. Notably, the original On Stage lacked a remote control, but On Stage II gained an 50-60-foot RF remote control, while On Stage III and IIIP revert to a cheaper but functionally similar 30-foot, line-of-sight-dependent Infrared version. This extra space enabled JBL to fit a six AA battery compartment into the newer version 3 models, a feature that was absent from On Stage and On Stage II, and permits On Stage IIIP to run for 12 hours at typical volume levels. Previously, the On Stage dish was all at a single 1.5” height, but now the body is angled, shortest at its 1.37” front and tallest close to its 1.75” back. The original On Stages were 6.75 inches in diameter On Stage III and On Stage IIIP are now 7.5”. Despite small changes to their bodies-mostly the location and shape of their iPod docks-On Stage, On Stage II and UD, On Stage III and IIIP all share the same general design: a UFO-like dish with an iPod dock and volume controls up front, four speaker drivers hidden under a wrap-around metal grille, and both ports and a power button in back. Here’s the more detailed explanation of these products and their relevant predecessors.










Jbl onstage iiip