Can't directly answer your question as I haven't tried the cell phone route of on bike communication. But we have found our R1's work pretty darned well while riding.Has anyone ever tried this?
I finally got my two Lectric XP ebikes and we are planning a ride today. The last trial of the R1 helmets went well, but I have recently been wondering about using cellular as an intercom? If you are riding around town with a decent cell signal, using one good earbud might be an alternative to the helmet intercom. Practically everyone these days has unlimited, or at least generous cell minutes available, so why not just make a call and keep the line open? My Apple Earpod Pros will certainly sound better than the Sena speakers and with better range and good noise cancelling besides. I'm with T-Mobile and I believe they allow calls to last 4 hours, but that might not be a hard limit. I also imagine using a bandaid or small piece of tape to keep from losing my earpod. multiple riders could even conference call.
Has anyone ever tried this?
This is an important point. The brain uses three cues to locate the source of sound: interaural time difference (ITD—the sound propagation time between the two ears), interaural level difference (ILD—the intensity difference between the two ears for the same sound), and the spectral composition of sound as "filtered" by the trunk, shoulders, head, and pinna. In short, without using both ears to listen to ambient sounds, you may not be able to tell whether a car is approaching from behind or from the side, for example.You don't always realize how much information your brain can process for situational awareness due to the stereo nature of hearing.
first paragraph for us, no need to press once intercom on, fluid back-and-forth conversations.We set up our R1's to intercom before the ride begins and just leave all the buttons alone. I find I can turn mine on, then hers and they work fine until the ride is over. They claim a 12 hour battery life, so no need to turn them off even for a stop. Or you could just turn yours off while stopped and then reconnect when you start back up, leaving hers alone. I suppose if you needed to adjust the volume for your wife, maybe try doing it at a red light or safe spot.
The Apple AirPod Pro models have a mode called "Transparency" that uses the mic to pick up and convey ambient sounds to the earpiece. You can hear your surroundings normally in that mode while still connected. They also work fine with only one in use, leaving an open ear. Additionally, they have a noise cancelling option, so with only one in use you can hear well on the other side.
As they say, "The Proof of The Pudding" but it seems like cellular should work, at least in the city. We both have dual sim phones so both Verizon and T-Mobile simultaneously for coverage. I will try my little experiment soon. Thanks for the suggestions.
The Sena R1 Evos are pretty simple for entering intercom mode. You press 2 buttons to turn the helmet on. Then after it is booted up you press the center button to put it in intercom mode. That's it.
The voice commands are pretty worthless IMO, but you don't really need them.
With the Evo helmets, there is no pairing. When you initially set them up, you pick the channel you want to use (there are 9 channels). After that you just turn them on (unless you are communicating with multiple groups and need to switch channels). From what I can tell, using the buttons is the only way to turn the helmet on. That is done by pressing the center and "+" buttons for 1 second. I don't think they have a "sleep" mode where you can turn them on/off with the app. Once they are booted up, you are supposed to be able to start the intercom session with the voice command "Hello Sena ... mesh intercom", but that command is not working in the current firmware. So you use the center button to start or stop the intercom feature. Interestingly, the voice command "Hello Sena ... stop intercom" does work!Have you tried the Sena app Alan? It works very well with the older X1's and makes pairing much easier than using the buttons.
With the Evo helmets, there is no pairing. When you initially set them up, you pick the channel you want to use (there are 9 channels). After that you just turn them on (unless you are communicating with multiple groups and need to switch channels). From what I can tell, using the buttons is the only way to turn the helmet on. That is done by pressing the center and "+" buttons for 1 second. I don't think they have a "sleep" mode where you can turn them on/off with the app. Once they are booted up, you are supposed to be able to start the intercom session with the voice command "Hello Sena ... mesh intercom", but that command is not working in the current firmware. So you use the center button to start or stop the intercom feature. Interestingly, the voice command "Hello Sena ... stop intercom" does work!
One of the annoying things about the voice command feature is that when you are in intercom mode and give the "Hello Sena" alert to start a voice command session, everyone in your intercom group hears that alert and all the helmets go into voice command mode.
Yes, I did use the Sena app to do the initial setup, but haven't found a need to use it since. I am hoping Sena will issue a firmware update at some point to improve the voice command feature.
I wonder if the helmet strap speakers on the Sena R1 EVO CS eliminates this problem by preventing the microphone from picking up sound from the built in speakers. It appears to me that Sena has retired the R1 EVO with the built in speakers and replaced it with the R1 EVO CS with the speakers on the helmet strap.One of the annoying things about the voice command feature is that when you are in intercom mode and give the "Hello Sena" alert to start a voice command session, everyone in your intercom group hears that alert and all the helmets go into voice command mode.
I wonder if the helmet strap speakers on the Sena R1 EVO CS eliminates this problem by preventing the microphone from picking up sound from the built in speakers. It appears to me that Sena has retired the R1 EVO with the built in speakers and replaced it with the R1 EVO CS with the speakers on the helmet strap.
If so, I’m happy for new buyers but sad for those of us who bought the best at the moment b4 aware of new ones. we are talking just a couple weeks. always possible with tech. maybe can avoid cross-voice by issuing voice command on tailights b4 meshing?I wonder if the helmet strap speakers on the Sena R1 EVO CS eliminates this problem by preventing the microphone from picking up sound from the built in speakers. It appears to me that Sena has retired the R1 EVO with the built in speakers and replaced it with the R1 EVO CS with the speakers on the helmet strap.