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Best wireless earbuds for the Motorola Edge 50 Ultra?

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Hey everyone! I just snagged the new Motorola Edge 50 Ultra and need some great wireless earbuds to pair with it. I'm really looking for something with top-tier noise cancellation and LDAC support to take advantage of the high-res audio. Are the Moto Buds+ the way to go, or is something like Sony better for this phone?


6 Answers
11

Yo, congrats on snagging the Edge 50 Ultra! Seriously, that phone is a high-res audio beast. In my experience testing these things over the years, youve got a few ways to go, but here is my breakdown based on what Ive seen. If you want the absolute BEST noise cancellation and want to push that LDAC to the limit, you gotta go with the Sony WF-1000XM5 Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds. I've used these on long flights and they basically delete engine noise. The LDAC implementation is rock solid too, so you'll definately get that high-res detail you're looking for. Sony's app is also way ahead of the curve for tuning your EQ. But, if you're looking for that ecosystem synergy, the Moto Buds+ Sound by Bose are actually way better than people realize. Since Motorola collaborated with Bose, the ANC is super punchy, and they integrate really well with the phone's Dolby Atmos settings. They support Hi-Res Audio too, tho the Sony's still edge them out on pure detail retrieval and sub-bass. Honestly, I'd lowkey look at the Sennheiser+Momentum+True+Wireless+4&linkCode=osi&------123456890?5422-20" target="_blank" rel="nofollow sponsored">Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 4 as well. They support both LDAC and aptX Lossless, which your phone is totally compatible with. The soundstage is wider than the Sonys, tbh, and the build quality feels realy premium. If I were in your shoes? If money isnt an issue, grab the Sonys for the isolation. If you want a seamless experience with the phone's UI for a bit less cash, the Moto Buds+ are the way to go. GL! 👍


11

> Are the Moto Buds+ the way to go, or is something like Sony better for this phone? Story time: I went through this last year when I was tryna find high-res buds without emptying my wallet lol. I've been messing with portable audio for years and learned that paying top dollar for names like Sony isnt always the only path. I actually settled on the Soundcore Liberty 4 NC Adaptive Noise Cancelling Earbuds and honestly? They're AMAZING. Basically, you get that LDAC support for way less than the flagship Sony WF-1000XM5 Wireless Noise Canceling Earbuds. Just a tip tho: you gotta enable LDAC in the app first or it wont kick in!! Most buds default to basic codecs to save battery life, so you have to manually switch it in the settings. Once it's active, the high-res detail is literally fantastic. I think the ANC is seriously close to the big dogs... maybe not 100% as quiet but for the price? Total win!!


3

Just saw this thread and honestly, I went through this exact same rabbit hole last year. Iโ€™ve tried many flagship buds over the years because Iโ€™m pretty obsessive about high-res codecs and how they actually perform in the real world. Story time: I spent months swapping between different sets trying to find which ones handled a 990kbps LDAC stream without those annoying micro-stutters you get in crowded areas. Itโ€™s such a mission to find that perfect balance between technical specs and actual stability, right? In my experience, while the Motorola+Edge+50+Ultra&linkCode=osi&------123456890?5422-20" target="_blank" rel="nofollow sponsored">Motorola Edge 50 Ultra is definitely a high-res beast, you gotta be careful with the hardware pairing. I messed around with the Sony WF-1000XM5 for a long time, and while their noise cancellation is literally top-tier, the fit was always a bit finicky for my ears. I eventually spent some time with the Technics EAH-AZ80-K and was blown away by the DAC implementation. They handle LDAC sooo smoothly and the soundstage feels way more expansive than most other buds Iโ€™ve tested. Basically, if youโ€™re chasing that high-bitrate dragon, the hardware inside the buds matters as much as the phone. Quick tip: Definitely go into your Android Developer Options and force the LDAC playback quality to "Optimized for Audio Quality" (990kbps). Most phones default to "Best Effort" which kinda defeats the purpose of having high-res hardware in the first place! Anyway, itโ€™s a journey finding the right ones but youโ€™ve got a great phone to start with. Good luck! 👍


3

Story time: I went through this last year trying to find high-res buds that wouldnt overheat or die after a month lol. Honestly, I'm big on safety first, so I went with the Sony WF-1000XM5 Wireless Noise Canceling Earbuds. * The LDAC is super stable
* Great thermal protection
* Industry-leading ANC The price tag is high but I think its worth it for the reliability alone! peace 👍


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Seconded!


2

Ok so I totally agree with the point about stability being the real deal breaker over time. I've been using high-res setups for a while now and honestly, the honeymoon phase always ends when you start getting those skips in crowded places. Basically, the specs look great on the box but living with it daily is a different story. I'm not exactly an expert on the technical side, but I think I heard somewhere that the software can be a bit aggressive with battery saving after you've had the phone for a few months. Not sure if that's still the case with the new Ultra, but it might mess with the LDAC bitrate if you aren't careful. IIRC there's a way to lock the bit rate in the settings, but it's kinda hidden. Also, from my experience owning these kinds of setups long-term, you really gotta check how the connection holds up once the earbud batteries aren't at 100 percent health anymore. Sometimes they start stuttering way more often after a year of heavy use. Has anyone else noticed the range dropping off after the first year? Just something I've been wondering about while looking at these new high-end setups.


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