![]() The unmarked button is only used for menu navigation in wired mode, but it’s the play/pause/assistant and answer/reject call button in Bluetooth mode. ![]() Holding down the power button will bring up the menu so you can do things like toggle charging or change EQ modes. In wireless mode, the display will just tell you what Bluetooth codec is being used. The power button pulls up the display so you can see the battery level and your current sample rate or if you’re decoding an MQA file. ![]() In wired mode, the volume rocker only adjusts your volume, but in Bluetooth mode it can skip tracks back and forth. It would be nice if the screen was bigger so it could display more data, but not knowing the sample rate of your MQA files or the current bit depth isn’t the end of the world.Īll of the controls are on the right side, along with a microphone. It doesn’t need to be very large since it only has to display basic information like battery and volume levels, what Bluetooth codec it’s using, the sample rate, or if it’s decoding an MQA file. While it does have a display behind that glass face, it only takes up a tiny portion of the available space. It has the same glass sandwich design we’re all accustomed to, complete with curved edges. It’s taken a lot of design notes from modern smartphones. It's also a wireless Bluetooth receiver that can pipe high-quality audio into a pair of premium wired headphones. In wired mode, the BTR5 replaces the crummy 3.5mm adapter that came with your phone (if you're lucky). The BTR5 works as a plug-n-play DAC, but that doesn’t mean that you have to have it plugged in to use it. Shop at Amazon Design, hardware, what’s in the box
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