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Yamaha launches TW-E7B earbuds with physical buttons and proprietary ANC

Yamaha, more known for its motorcycles and musical instruments, is updating its true wireless earbuds offering. The new TW-E7B in-ear headphones are now available in the US. These wireless earbuds bring advanced proprietary noise canceling technology along with dramatic design update over the TW-E7A.

TL;DR

  • Yamaha’s new TW-E7B earbuds boast large audio drivers and the newer Bluetooth 5.2.
  • The TW-E7B headphones come with physical keys for controls.
  • These earbuds are available in dark blue, black, beige, and white for $280 price.

The Yamaha TW-E7B headphones pick up the company’s custom ANC technology that were present on its predecessor. Unlike most in-ear headphones that produce suppressed audio when filtering out noises, Yamaha claims its technology only outputs untouched music signals, thus creating better sound. Yamaha doubles it down by enabling the Listening Care feature that intelligently balances the music volume with the aid of these ANC microphones.

Yamaha TW-E7B wireless earbuds colors

Yamaha TW-E7B true wireless earbuds are available in dark blue, beige, white, and black / © Yamaha

Yamaha’s TW-E7B are IPX5 water resistance and come with circular and larger bud shaped as opposed to the rounded shape of the older earbuds. What’s new also is the physical volume locker present on the right side paired with a single function key on the left. Gamers can also take advantage of the low latency mode that you can be accessed through three presses on the lower volume key. Moreover, the latest buds now utilize large 10mm sound drivers.

In terms of audio codecs, Yamaha has kept the aptX Adaptive along with AAC and SBC. However, the TW-E7B wireless earbuds now use newer Bluetooth 5.2 connectivity and Google’s fast pair mode. Both Siri and Google Assistant voice command features are supported while equalizer presets are available through the Yamaha mobile app.

Battery life and pricing of Yamaha TW-E7B

Battery life on the in-ear noise canceling earbuds is a downgrade from the TW-E7A. The new battery rating is only 22 hours using the charging, which is 6 hours shorter than the original.

Yamaha has listed the TW-E7B for price of $280 with color options of beige, dark blue, black, and white. You can already order the earbuds through Amazon. We will yet find out if Yamaha will release the TW-E7B on other markets. On the other hand, the non-ANC TW-E5B model is $20 cheaper from Amazon.

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Sports

HRC Honda clear in Q1 as ex-Moto2 racer Nagashima stuns

Team HRC has established itself as the early squad to bear during this weekend’s Suzuka 8 Hours after Tetsuta Nagashima emerged to the top of the timesheets in both FP1 and Q1 by a huge margin.

Making his Suzuka 8 Hours debut this weekend alongside Takumi Takahashi and ex-MotoGP rider Iker Lecuona as part of the flagship HRC entry from Honda – one of 16 teams representing the marque at its home venue – Nagashima belied his relative inexperience at the venue by looking very much at home on it.

Stopping the clock for a best of 2m 05.823s in the two-hour FP1 sessionh, Nagashima went to take almost a full second off that benchmark in Q1 with a 2m 04.942s lap set in the first of the three 20min qualifying phases, slicing a full 0.2s off the lap record in the process.

With no other rider able to get close to his best time, Nagashima – who has not raced on a high-profile stage since announcing he would be quitting Moto2 at the end of the 2020 season – would end Q1 almost a second clear over nearest rival Niccolo Canepa on the YART Yamaha R1.

With the Q1 and later Q2 session split into three phases – designated for what organizers refer to as ‘Yellow’, ‘Blue’ and ‘Red’ riders, aka Rider #1, #2 and #3 respectively – while the first and second 20min sessions went ahead without issue, the third was met by rain falling at one sector of the lap, preventing those going last to get anywhere near the top times.

It meant six-time WorldSBK title winning Jonathan Rea’s efforts would be compromised, though Alex Lowes was still quick enough to put the Kawasaki Racing Team in third position, ahead of the domestic Astemo Honda Dream team of Terusuke Sakumoto, Kazuma Watanabe and Taiga Haneda was close behind in fourth.

SDG Honda Racing completed the top five thanks to a rapid lap by Teppei Nagoshi in the first session, relegating FCC TSR France – Honda’s nominated Endurance World Championship effort – down into sixth position.

Two more Honda teams filled out the top ten with Honda Sofukai Suzuka and Honda Dream Racing Team Sakurai ending Q1 in seventh and ninth respectively.

They sandwiched Spa 24 Hours winners BMW – the only entry in the entire field to be competing with European riders on a European motorcycle built by a European manufacturer – in eighth.

Defending EWC champions Yoshimura Suzuki Endurance Racing Team completed the top ten despite doing without its star rider Sylvain Guintoli, who skipped Q1 to rest a hand injury, while Gregg Black is a late addition to the line-up alongisde Kazuki Watanabe after Xavier Simeon was struck down by COVID.

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Categories
Sports

MotoGP Silverstone: Dovizioso: It’s the right moment, Misano will be a farewell party | MotoGP

It was at that same event last season that the Italian made his return to MotoGP, initially on a year-old Petronas Yamaha before switching to the latest factory-spec M1 for the revamped RNF team.

Dovizioso had fond memories of the Yamaha from a brilliant 2012 campaign at Tech3, while the current M1 leads the standings with reigning champion Fabio Quartararo.

But from his first laps, Dovizioso felt the current Yamaha possessed an unusually narrow window of grip, which only a Quartararo-type riding style could master.

The end result is that, while Quartararo leads the standings with three race wins and 172 points, the next best Yamaha of team-mate Franco Morbidelli is just 19th on 25 points.

Dovizioso has just ten points, putting him equal with rookie Darryn Binder on the A-spec bike. Dovizioso’s friend, former team-mate and Yamaha test rider Cal Crutchlow will take over Dovi’s seat for the final six rounds, following Misano.

“First of all, I would like to thank Yamaha and the team and WithU because they give me a big support and they understood me,” Dovizioso said. “That has been very important to me.

“At the end, after 20 years, it’s always tough to make this kind of decision. But it’s OK, I’m relaxed and it’s the right moment to make this decision.

“As a rider, when you are not able to be where you want, your mind starts thinking about these things [stopping].

“And with that I started thinking that Misano would be the right final race. To do my last home race and finish there with a party and a big smile from my friends and all the fans.”

Dovizioso: ‘Straight away I was a bit surprised about the grip’

“From the beginning when I jumped on the bike, and felt the base of the bike, straight away I was a bit surprised about the grip. I always said that and that I think was the biggest characteristic I really fought.

“My way to ride the Yamaha has not been the best way to use the potential of the bike, because Fabio has shown every race there is a possibility to be competitive and win the title with this bike.

“I worked a lot with the team. I worked a lot with Ramon [Forcada], with Yamaha and tried a lot of things, maybe even too much. But when we changed also big things it didn’t affect a lot.

“So that was just a confirmation that the match between my riding style, my way to approach the track and the characteristic of Yamaha didn’t match in the best way.”

On paper, Dovizioso’s results suffered after the introduction of a revised Michelin rear tire construction in 2020.

“The [tyre] change when I was in Ducati affected me in a negative way for sure. But at the end I was fighting that year and I finished fourth, as the first Ducati. So also without a good feeling at the end of the result was acceptable,” Dovizioso said.

“It’s difficult to know exactly how much that [tyre construction] affected me, but I think it’s a mix of a lot of things.

“MotoGP is changing, but it’s normal when we are speaking about the best class about motorcycle and the development is big. The effort from the manufacturer is big, the effort from the rider is big.

“So it’s normal the development is really fast and a lot of things changed. Now in the way you have to race and ride the bike is quite different compared to five years ago for example.

“I don’t speak about this in a negative way, just it’s different.

“Now you win the race by [pure] speed,” Dovizioso added. “It’s difficult to see a lot of overtaking because now everybody is fast and you play more about the lap time than the strategy for the consumption of the tyre.

“If you are fast in practice and you already found the speed, more or less you can also keep this speed in the race. But this is just a consequence of developing the tyre. The tires change. You can push a bit more than the past so you can be consistent and keep a similar pace until the end.

“That’s why now in MotoGP there are less battles, there is also a lot of aerodynamics and that doesn’t help for the overtaking. So this is the change of the MotoGP, but I don’t want to speak in a negative way, it’s just change and it’s not the best for the battle. But it’s the way to race in MotoGP now.”

The future? ‘I don’t have anything on the table’

After two decades in the world championship, 103 podiums and 24 race wins, what comes next for Dovizioso?

“Now I don’t have anything big on the table, because I didn’t try to find anything,” he said. “I think it’s normal after 20 years in one place that you need a bit of time to do some other things and live in a different way.

“I’m not anymore that young, but I still feel young enough to live and use my body at this moment. To race, for example, motocross and enjoy the last I don’t know – some years! – in a good shape and enjoy that situation.

“I also have in my mind for a long time, more than 10 years, a dream to create something at home and still it’s not done, but I’m close and I’m really happy,” he revealed.

“But I’m not done about that so I don’t want to speak about it yet, because it’s a bit too early, but I’m really focused on one project and I think that it would be really nice if I would be able to work on that and race with Motocross.

“I will keep for sure the door open about everything because I think I have a lot of experience in this [MotoGP] world. I already had some requests in the past already to do something here, but in this moment I feel I need a bit of time to do what I want at home and let’s see.”

Dovizioso also didn’t exclude taking on some kind of rider representation role in MotoGP.

“I already hear something about that and I want to keep the door open… So let’s see. Can be 50-50.”

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