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Nearly Flawless |
December 18, 2008 |
| Reviewer:
nathan
from Chicago, IL
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This bag is a must if you have or are getting the SoundDock Portable. There are three small pouches on the front of the bag beneath the flap cover. They ended up being perfect for us (one for the remote, one for our iPod Classic, and one for my wife's iPhone). The unit fits snugly in the bottom of the bag. An attached interior flap folds down to cover and protect the gloss finish of the unit and creates additional storage space in the top of the bag for the wall plug (in it's own compartment), a camera, headphones, etc. The magnetic closure of the cover holds tight with the bag laying on it's side under the seat of an airplane even with all that extra stuff inside.
The one minor downfall is that once the prongs are detatched from the wall plug in order to fit it in it's compartment, there is no dedicated place to store them. It's a small, fragile piece that would probably be fine rattling around in the top of the bag, but we kept it elsewhere to be safe. This is not enough to knock the bag down to four stars. If I could've, I'd've given it 4.75 stars. Since I couldn't, I just rounded.
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Nice compliment to the SoundDock |
August 21, 2008 |
| Reviewer:
William
from Montana
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This traveling case for the SoundDock Portable was a great addition to the unit itself. It has been functional and easy to use, and compliments the look of the Bose product itself. Its magnetic closure are easy, but not very secure. I would have rated it a perfect five except for a couple of other things: 1. The SoundDock fits snugly in the unit, but leaves a space about 12x3x4 inch space in the top. Bose conveniently created a storage pocket for the large wall wart power unit that fits in this space, but there is a large unused space left over. Unfortunately there are no other convenient "pouches" in this top area, so anything you put in that area will scratch the top of the SoundDock. I think it would have been better to have a pouch the full width of the case, that you could put the wall wart in, as well as cables and other items. 2. Although it is nice to have the pocket for the wall wart power unit, Bose recommends that you remove the "power prongs" that actually plug into the wall. Not only is this hard to do (they are very tight) but it is a hassle, and the pouch cannot contain them without stressing out the pouch. I don't know about you, but I don't have any "portable" electronics that require disassembly of the power supplies-a huge oversight in my mind.
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