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Cambridge Audio Melomania M100 review: the best earbuds prompts in the business with excellent ANC too

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Cambridge Audio Melomania M100: Two-minute review
The Cambridge Audio Melomania M100 are what the fans were waiting for. Prior to their release, Cambridge Audio’s excellent earbuds couldn’t join the ranks of the best noise-cancelling earbuds for one simple reason: the UK audio specialist’s true wireless buds sounded fantastic, but they didn’t have the necessary antiphase noise-nixing tech onboard to offer active noise cancellation. And that is because Cambridge Audio prefers to focus on excellent audio quality (and long may that last by the way). 
But times have changed. While Melomania will never cease to mean ‚crazy about music‘, the British company has conceded that the people are also crazy about active noise cancellation. And if Cambridge is going to offer ANC, it’s going to do it right. Although you can’t tweak its splendid noise cancelling profile any further than ‚On‘, ‚Off‘ or ‚Transparency‘, when it’s on, the ANC here is as effective at cancelling low-level noise as you could wish for, cocooning me in a bubble of near-silence and keeping the footsteps around my desk (plus my own tap-tap-tapping of the laptop keys upon which I bring you this review) barred from that bubble. 
The transparency profile is less useful, with a bit too much audible feedback and a near-constant quiet hiss, even in quiet environments, to be a wholly pleasant experience. But a less-than-perfect transparency mode is a minor shortfall I’m prepared to accept when the noise nixing is this good. 
Multi-point connectivity is baked in here, as is aptX Lossless and aptX Adaptive for higher-resolution audio (if you’ve got a decent, paid-for music streaming subscription and files up to 24bit/96kHz to serve them), and the battery life, at up to 10 hours from the buds and a total of 23 with ANC on, or 16 hours from the buds and 36 with ANC off, is exceptional. The build quality is also bang-on, with a far more ergonomic driver housing than the bullet-shaped Melomania 1 Plus. 
There’s no device-agnostic spatial audio special side-sauce or fit tests and I’m not surprised. I can hear Cambridge Audio’s engineers reaffirm the choice to offer „as few opportunities as possible to muck around with your music – we like a clean sound“, as they did at the launch of the excellent CXN100 Network Player in January 2024. And you know what? I really don’t mind, because the sound in these earbuds is expansive, detailed, nuanced, clean, neutral and immersive enough all by itself. That said, Cambridge will let you select one of six EQ presets, or create a custom one of your own – with a seven-point EQ parametric tab. 
Call handling is also very good, thanks to the Qualcomm’s three mic cVc (or Clear Voice Capture) solution, designed to separate your voice from environmental noise, which works very well indeed. 
I should mention that the case is a little big – again, I’m OK with this more substantial box given the excellent stamina, sound quality and ANC. Also, they’re perhaps $50 or £40 pricier than the direct competition. Are they worth it? It all comes down to whether you prioritise sound quality above all else in a true wireless design. For me, the Melomania M100 represent sound-per-pound value – but if you want fit tests, tailored otoacoustic hearing profiles and other whistles and bells, you won’t want these. Cambridge Audio Melomania M100 review: Price and release date
Released on March 27, 2024
Priced at $219 / £169 / AU$299
The Cambridge Audio M100 aren’t as cheap as the Melomania 1 Plus earbuds they succeed, which had a launch price of $139.95 / £119.95 / about AU$185 – although their price has dropped significantly since that.
At £169 (about $219 / AU$326) they’re still considerably more affordable than AirPods Pro 2, which typical sell for $249 / £249 / AU$399. While you could argue that Apple sets a pretty high bar and most brands undercut that pricing, that’s not necessarily true in 2024. Consider Bose’s $299 / £299 / AU$449 Bose QuietComfort Ultra, Sennheiser’s March 2024 $299 / £259 / AU$479 Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 4 or Technics‘ EAH-AZ80, also at $299 / £259 / AU$499. See? For the level, Cambridge Audio has actually priced these earbuds competitively.
What you need to know is that while there’s plenty of flagship talent here, they actually come in slightly under flagship money. The Melomania M100 are not as affordable as the excellent Nothing Ear (a), for example, but the Nothing buds are an entry-level proposition – a great proposition, but missing just one or two of the flagship features you’ll find in their top-tier Nothing Ear counterparts. Cambridge Audio Melomania M100 review: SpecsCambridge Audio Melomania M100 review: Features
Great active noise cancellation and app support
Excellent battery life
Use the ‚Southwark‘ Audible Feedback profile
The fact that Cambridge Audio has included active noise-cancellation (ANC) plus a Transparency mode is big news, because it’s a first for the UK audio outfit’s Melomania lineup – but the even bigger news is, the noise nixing works really well. At my desk, I’m living in a bubble of near-silence akin to that afforded by the AirPods Pro 2, and that’s not a statement I make lightly. 
You’re also getting Bluetooth 5.3 with LE Audio, aptX Lossless for CD-like audio quality, Auracast (for when broadcast audio-sharing comes to our airports and waiting rooms), plus the more efficient LC3 codec. 
Call handling is a breeze using the Melomania M100’s three mics per earpiece (kitted out with cVc echo-cancelling and noise suppression tech from Qualcomm) and the battery life here is very impressive, with a possible 52 hours from the buds and charging case combined – because you get 16 hours from the buds alone if you keep ANC turned off.

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