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Home > Columns > Noah
Kravitz
Product Review:
Tivoli iPAL Portable Audio System 18 June 2004 by Noah
Kravitz Columnist
Tivoli iPAL
Portable Audio System $129, Tivoliaudio.com
A Pal for Your Pod
Wires aren't dead just yet. While there's much to be excited about
in the brave new world of wireless digital audio, the tried and true
patch cord is still the most reliable (not to mention affordable) way to
get music off your iPod or Mac and out into the air where it can be
enjoyed. Connecting a 3G iPod to your home stereo through the line-out jack on the dock is
the easiest way to great sound at home, but what about when you want to take the music with you on
a picnic, to a party, or just out to the hammock in the backyard? The success of the iPod has spawned a handful of portable, wire-connected
speaker systems designed specifically for use with it. I took a look at
the Altec Lansing InMotion system a few
months ago. The inMotions shined when it came to design, portability, and usability,
but still might leave a little something to be desired in the ears of the on-the-go audiophile.
Renowned for their Henry Kloss-designed Model One radios, the gang at Tivoli Audio has sent over their "new" iPAL
portable audio system for our scrutiny and your consideration. The quotes around "new" are because
while the iPAL is a fresh addition to the Tivoli catalog, it's really just the "old" PAL with an
iPod white/silver face lift and an "i" at the front of its name. The "i"'s etymology should be
obvious from the new look, and the PAL stands for Portable Audio Laboratory.
Tivoli took the award-winning concept behind the Model One, shrunk it a little and wrapped it in
a weather resistant case complete with rechargable batteries and called it the PAL. PAL is a single-speaker
AM/FM radio with aux-in and headphone-out jacks available in
a wide range of colors in addition to the iPAL, which is a really cute little number. Measuring
6.25" tall x 3.6875" wide x 3.875" deep and weighing 2 lbs., iPAL is imminently portable and smartly
designed. I really like the modern/retro fusion that certain designers are adopting in nods to both
the analog past and digital future, and iPAL's got it in spades. The front face is simply arranged,
with two big circles (analog tuning dial and speaker) at top and bottom and two smaller circles (function and
volume knobs) to the left and right. The matte silver metal on iPod-white plastic front face looks
snazzy on the silver-grey housing of the unit, and iPAL coordinates very nicely with the white of
an iPod or iBook.
Kind of makes you wonder what color Apple's going to pick for their next
trend-shaping new gadget, come to think of it...
Retro Looks, Time-Tested Performance
The big chrome tuning knob isn't a trendy retro gimmick, but rather the same geared-down 5:1
tuning dial found on the Model One. Tivoli claims the system allows for easy, ultra-precise radio
tuning, and I'd have to agree with that. If you listen to the radio much, especially in a crowded
market like the New York City spectrum I tested iPAL in, you'll come to love Tivoli's analog dial. Sure,
it's nice to see your station frequency from across the room on a bright LED readout, but it's even
more fun to tune in those weaker stations you sometimes can't get on an average digital tuner. The
rotating, telescoping FM antenna performed well (as did the internal AM antenna), and folds back into a molded slot on the back of the unit for
handy storage.
iPAL includes an 1/8" stereo patch cable suitable for connecting your iPod's headphone or line-out
jack to the radio's Aux In (located on the back). There is no Aux setting on iPal's AM/FM/Power Off
function knob; when something is plugged into the Aux port, iPAL automatically switches over
to that audio source. I found this kind of neat and kind of annoying at the same time -- it's nice to have one
less control to fiddle with, but if you're going to leave iPAL set up in one place for awhile, it'd also be nice
to leave the aux cable plugged in whether you're using the radio or an external source. A nice design
touch is the inclusion of rubber plugs for both the aux and headphone jacks to keep rain, sand, and
other non-electronic friendly elements away from your PAL.
A single green LED provides power and battery status information. Tivoli claims the
"environmentally-friendly rechargeable Nickel Metal Hydride battery pack has no memory" and can
last up to 14 hours on a charge, depending on how high you crank the volume up. I ran the PAL for
several hours, left it overnight, ran it for several hours again the next day, and it still worked for
me a few days later -- good enough for me for me. An AC adapter is included.
Okay, okay ... How's it Sound?
I've literally never heard a portable monoaural radio sound as good as the iPAL. This little wonder
produced rich bass, clean midrange, and clear highs from both the radio and external sources. Considering
it's overall size and the fact that I was only listening to a single, 2.5" driver, I have to say I was
as amazed with it as all those people quoted on the Tivoli website. The dilemma here is that iPAL is
not a stereo system -- it's a single-speaker, mono system. For AM radio or spoken word recordings
that's fine, but I'm really used to listening to music in stereo, and while iPAL produces a wonderful
single-channel sound, I missed that stereo separation.
The more I've come to rely on my Mac and
iPod as audio sources, the more conscious I've become of listening for differences in compression
schemes, bitrates, and other quirks of digital audio. So I tested iPAL with a variety of material
ranging from CDs and DVDs to high-quality AAC and low-bitrate mp3 files. But the source material
isn't the issue here -- iPAL can handle whatever you throw at it, and it handles it with clarity
and grace, with enough power to fill an office or bedroom with distortion-free music ... but in mono.
To PAL or not to PAL?
My iPAL shipped with a note from my contact at Tivioli mentioning how he liked to use his PAL: In the garage,
in the yard, on weekend camping trips ... you get the idea. The PAL line was meant to be taken with you.
It's small, rechargable, and pretty immune to the bumps, bruises, and occasional splashes of beverages
and rainwater that come with being a portable radio. And, again, it sounds better than any single-speaker
radio I've ever heard. But as an iPod-specific speaker system, I kept wanting stereo. I'd close my
eyes and imagine I was listening to a two-speaker setup, but it didn't work: no stereo. I plugged
headphones into the headphone jack and, Behold, stereo! But I can plug headphones straight into
my iPod, so that didn't really help things. Finally, I drew
the objective conclusion that iPAL's one speaker reproduces music better than the two speakers found
in inMotion and other portable stereo setups I've tried -- it's true, in my opinion -- but I still
found my ears searching for that separation you can't get out of one speaker.
$129 for a portable radio isn't cheap, but iPAL's sound is really pretty incredible
when you consider just how small it is. No single-unit stereo is going to create a wide-enough
separation to rival two speakers spread across space to create that magic triangle with a listener's
ears, so the issue here may well come down to portability. If you're in the market for a top-notch,
great-looking
portable radio with rechargable batteries and an aux-in when you want it, it's hard to beat the PALs. The chrome and white
iPAL is very cool looking, but don't be afraid to mix a little blue or green (or brown or yellow or...) in with all of
those white gadgets you suddenly are finding yourself surrounded by.
But if you listen to music with a critical ear and want a small, powered system for your iPod, Mac, or other
stereo signal, you might want to think twice about making iPAL your iPOD's new best friend.
Lucky for you, Tivoli makes a stereo version of the Model One radio iPAL is based upon ... cleverly enough, it's
called the Model Two.
iPAL and the full palette of PAL systems are available direct from Tivoli as well as Amazon and other retailers for
$129.
* * * * Noah Kravitz runs the Technology
and Culture blog Threebase.com.
He is an educator, musician, and writer who calls Brooklyn, NY home and
the author of the forthcoming book, Teaching and
Learning with Technology.
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