Jaybird Vista review

Energetic sound and a secure fit make the Vistas an ideal runner’s choice Tested at £159

Jaybird Vista review
(Image: © Jaybird)

What Hi-Fi? Verdict

If you’ve had enough of your wireless earbuds falling out as soon as you get running, these are a great-fitting, competent-sounding solution

Pros

  • +

    Punchy, energetic sound

  • +

    Meaty bass

  • +

    Excellent fit

Cons

  • -

    Can be beaten for detail

  • -

    Quite expensive

Why you can trust What Hi-Fi? Our expert team reviews products in dedicated test rooms, to help you make the best choice for your budget. Find out more about how we test.

The engineers at Jaybird, dedicated makers of wireless sports headphones since 2006, know exactly what it feels like to be out running when one of your headphones falls out and gets lost in the grass. So they’ve come up with a pair of wireless earbuds designed to not do that.

The Jaybird Vistas are true wireless earbuds for athletes. They’re the company’s second shot at truly wireless in-ears (after the Run XT), with the firm’s other sport headphone model, the Tarah, unable to claim ‘true’ wirelessness due to a single wire connecting the two buds. Note that the Vista now has a sequel in the new Vista 2. 

Build

Jaybird Vista build

(Image credit: Jaybird)

The Vistas weigh just 6g apiece, can play independently and feature in-app, customisable sound profiles and settings.

The units have been made with SportFit's integrated silicone gel eartip and fins: a thumb-print sized piece of silicone comprising both the traditional tip plus a shark’s fin-shaped protrusion, all of which snaps on to the unit and covers its entirety, except for the singular top button. Three sizes have been supplied.

A secure fit that won’t budge even when you start to kick like Mo Farah, alongside IPX7 water- and sweat-proofing is the end goal here. Even if the worst happens and one earphone escapes your grasp before you manage to put it in, the Vistas  are crushproof so should survive the fall and any subsequent trampling. Sure enough, they feel durable in our hands, although we stop short of stamping on them.

Jaybird Vista tech specs

(Image credit: Jaybird)

Style In-ear

Impedance 23 ohms

Response 20Hz - 20kHz

Battery life 6 hours (+10 hours from case)

Bluetooth version 5.0

Dimensions (hwd) 24 x 22 x 18mm

Weight 6g

Featuring all-new 6mm drivers, the Vistas will give you six hours of playback on a full charge, plus an additional 10 hours from the charging case. The single earbud mode means that if you switch periodically from right to left you can potentially get 32 hours out of them, although listening to just one headphone at a time, particularly for that sort of duration, seems a little desperate to us.

Jaybird claims a quick five-minute ‘super-charge’ will give you an hour of playback. The efficient charging is possibly down to the newer and better USB-C port, rather than the older micro-USB used in most charging cases. 

The build here is functional and un-fussy. The brushed, rubberised plastic provides enough grip for them to not leap from our hand; the chord loop on the small case is useful and the neon yellow interior of the case is perfect for locating the buds on an early-morning run. Everything is designed with the runner in mind.

The only downside is that there’s only a single light on the charging case. It pulsates when you open the case or to signify charging, but there’s no visual indication gauge for battery life – although a soothing voice tells you the current percentage of charge left each time you put them in.

Jaybird's app is genuinely enjoyable. After guiding you through Bluetooth pairing, (with a soothing voice announcing a successful connection) the app then sorts you out with a personal EQ preset. It plays six different sonic tones and, depending on how soon you hear it, the app optimises the soundfield for your ears. This personal preset can be tweaked manually and/or saved to the headphones simply by closing the app.

You can also manually tweak the functions of each bud's central button. This is Jaybird’s way of avoiding the intricate Morse code of quick presses or swipes needed to adjust the volume on many other buds. So, a single press could mean pausing a track or laying a favourite playlist, while a long-press could mean upping the volume or powering off. It’s a thoughtful touch.

Comfort

Jaybird Vista comfort

(Image credit: Jaybird)

The big question is: do they stay put in your ears while running? All sound analysis is secondary if a pair of athletic in-ears cannot achieve a decent fit. So, we don our activewear and head out for a run.

The tips that come pre-fitted with the Vistas are perfect for us. The units are comfortable to wear, relatively cool, streamlined and do not budge as we pound the pavement.

Secure fit? Check. Solid Bluetooth connection? Yes, indeed. How about we test how they actually sound?

Sound

Jaybird Vista sound

(Image credit: Jaybird)

We cue up our running playlist on Qobuz, and first up is Queen’s Don’t Stop Me Now. We switch our EQ preset to ‘Flat’, with no optional EQ alterations, thus enabling like-for-like musical comparison. Our personal preset did ease things off slightly through treble frequencies, which was pleasant to our ears.

Freddie Mercury’s voice goes down through an easily-handled and meaty bass right up to a highly likeable treble. The high hat plays around our right ear beautifully as Brian May’s vocal comes in. 

The Vistas time as well as any runner’s pacer app. There’s a fair dollop of detail on offer – we easily hear Freddie utter “all right” during May’s instrumental electric guitar section. As Another One Bites the Dust begins, there’s no shortage of excitement and clout through the initial driving bass guitar riff, or dynamic build through an impressive crescendo. The Vistas are punchy, perky performers.

Edwin Starr’s War starts playing and we notice a marginal deficiency in detail – the saxophones aren’t quite as full, detailed, or recognisable as horn instruments as they are via Cambridge Audio’s Melomania 1 true wireless in-ear headphones. It’s a small issue and one we wouldn’t notice in isolation, because the Vistas provide a pleasing, fun and musical sound overall.

There’s no shortfall in stereo imaging either; the initial drum-fill moves just as decisively from our left ear into both – there’s just a fraction of extra detail to be dug up from the Cambridge Audios.

Verdict

While you can get a sliver more detail and hi-fi sounding performance from the Melomania 1, that’s not to say the Vistas are poor as a result. A pair of sports headphones must ensure a perfect fit alongside an energetic and punchy sound to even approach worthiness. And the Jaybird Vistas have absolutely achieved this.

If you’re tired of feeling your earphones slowly falling out of your ears when out running, the Vistas are a great solution. The sound isn’t quite the best that money can buy at this price, but the fit is among the best we've tested.

While there’s a marginal compromise involved, the Vista’s sonic performance is more than good enough to get you through a proper workout. This is a frontrunner in the niche, true wireless sport category.

SCORES

  • Sound 4
  • Comfort 5
  • Build 5

MORE:

Best wireless headphones 2019

Cambridge Audio Melomania 1 review

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  • bristollinnet
    A runner's ear-bud?

    Where next with such marketing bollocks?

    ...an earbud for cyclists?
    ...an earbud for babies?
    ...an earbud for school?
    ...an earbud for vicars?
    ...an earbud for sex?
    Reply