Tag Archives: earphones

Warning over crowd funded bike products

We warned riders about supporting the crowd-funding campaign for RiderBuds earphones after customers had still not received products almost a year after the promised delivery date.

However, two customers in Holland and Canada have now contacted us to say they have finally received their RiderBuds and are happy with their performance.

We are satisfied they are legitimate customers and not linked with the RiderBuds company. 

Originally company founder Maurice Dziubinski corresponded with us and even promised a review set. However, over the past year he has stopped replying to our frequent emails requesting updates on delivery.

That, plus the many comments from disappointed customers, made us understandably wary of this product. Riderbuds earphones

Dutch customer Stephan says he ordered them on 22 February 2019 and was hoping they would be shipped during May 2019 as promised in the Indiegogo campaign launched in November 2018.

I eventually received the RiderBuds on 25 March 2020, which is 13 months after I ordered them and 10 months late on their initial planning,” he says.

“I have to say, after they failed to deliver in May and the updates we received got less frequent, I started thinking I might have contributed to another scam on Indiegogo.

When Maurice told us that 84% of top crowd funding projects are shipped late – often as much as one year late – I started to suspect things were not as they seemed. At that point I had completely given up on the product,” says Stephan who was caught by a crowd-funding product scam.

“I started to check the updates once every few months and when COVID-19 hit around the end of 2019 I thought that he had found the perfect excuse to delay delivery even further. Fortunately I was wrong and I actually received the product, which turns out to be great!”

Stephan displays his RiderBuds in front of the computer screen showing our original articleStephan displays his RiderBuds in front of the computer screen showing our original article

He says he has used in-helmet speakers prior before that were “terrible”.

“I have a full face helmet and they do not have cut-outs for in helmet speakers, so my ears got sore,” he says.

“I tried using in-ear earbuds and they were even worse; dislodging, discomfort. So when I spotted RiderBuds I was sold.”

Our original article said the earphones ($US199, $A275, €175, £150) were claimed to be the smallest, softest, toughest, quietest and most secure earphones for riders.

They claimed they can’t be dislodged when putting on a helmet or pulling it off like most other earphones.,

The cable connections are also supposed to be tougher and won’t fray or break with rough use; even if you pull them out by the cable.

Crowd funding warning

Like other previews of prospective motorcycle products, we included a warning to our readers that supporting a crowd-funding campaign for a product not yet manufactured is not without risk.

Kickstarter and Indiegogo do not offer refunds to supporters who pledge money for products that either fail to reach their goal or do reach their goal and then fail through fraud.

The latter was the case with the infamous Skully head-up display helmet where the founders blew $US2.4m in supporters’ money on fast cars and women!

Unless a crowd-funding campaign specifically mentions a refund, supporters are advised they will have to contact the campaigner to get their money back.

They are also notoriously late with delivery as has been experienced with RiderBuds.

Maurice told us on the launch of his campaign that he spent hundreds of hours testing the earphones, talked with more than 1000 riders around the world and had a few dozen Beta testers, including in Australia and New Zealand.

His crowd-funding campaign was fully subscribed in three hours, 200% in 12 hours and raised $A164,255 from 688 backers within a month.

The campaign page is still live and has now amassed more than $A220,000 from 885 backers.

We are surprised Indiegogo did not suspend the page and stop taking money after many complaints on the page from potential customers.

One comment came from a customer who suggested Maurice had moved from Hong Kong to Vietnam because of the COVID-19 outbreak and was getting the production sorted out.

The comments have now been deleted and replaced by “testimonials”.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Warning on potential RiderBuds fraud

Riders are warned not to support the crowd-funding campaign for RiderBuds earphones nor to buy them because of a suspected fraud.

The campaign launched in November 2018 but the earphones have still not been delivered to many customers.

We published an article that month ($US199, $A275, €175, £150) that said they were claimed to be the smallest, softest, toughest, quietest and most secure earphones for riders.

Like other previews of prospective motorcycle products, we included a warning to our readers that supporting a crowd-funding campaign for a product not yet manufactured is not without risk.

Kickstarter and Indiegogo do not offer refunds to supporters who pledge money for products that either fail to reach their goal or do reach their goal and then fail through fraud.

The latter was the case with the infamous Skully head-up display helmet where the founders blew $US2.4m in supporters’ money on fast cars and women!

Unless a crowd-funding campaign specifically mentions a refund, supporters are advised they will have to contact the campaigner to get their money back.

RiderBuds ‘fraud’ warning

Riderbuds earphones

In the case of RiderBuds, many customers have complained on the campaign page that the product has still not delivered despite the delivery deadline of May 2019.

They also claim Indiegogo and the founder are not responding to emails.

We contacted Indiegogo and RiderBuds founder Maurice Dziubinski for comment and but have also received no reply.

Maurice told us on the launch of the campaign he spent hundreds of hours testing the earphones, talked with more than 1000 riders around the world and had a few dozen Beta testers, including in Australia and New Zealand.

His crowd-funding campaign was fully subscribed in three hours, 200% in 12 hours and raised $A164,255 from 688 backers within a month.

The campaign page is still live and has now amassed $A213,415 from 885 backers.

Indiegogo has a duty to remove or at least suspend the page and stop taking money when they have been alerted to potential fraud by several backers until it can be resolved.

The comments on the crowd-funding page seem to suggest Maurice of Poland is now living in Vietnam.

A reader who tested the prototype said it’s “a great product so I really hope they come through”.

“There have been delays for sure which has been frustrating but I don’t think he has any intention of ripping people off,” the tester said.

“He said he moved to Vietnam because of the COVID-19 outbreak; he was living in Hong Kong while he was getting the production etc sorted out.

“I’m not vouching for him in any way, just giving you some more info. I haven’t had any direct communication from months, but I didn’t expect any either. I think he underestimated the challenges of bringing a product to market!”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

RiderBuds smallest earphones for riders

RiderBuds earphones claim to be the smallest, softest, toughest, quietest and most secure earphones for riders that won’t come out when you put your helmet on or take it off.

Founder Maurice Dziubinski says he has spent hundreds of hours testing the earphones and has even had 1000 Beta testers around the world including Australia and New Zealand.

The company launched an Indiegogo campaign this week to raise funds to go into production and it was fully subscribed in less than three hours.Riderbuds earphones

Delivery is now expected in May 2019 and they will cost $US199 (about $A275, €175, £150).

Maurice says supporters can still contribute to the crowd-funding campaign and get an earlybird discount of $US129.

“We achieved 100% of our funding goal in less than three hours, and 200% of our funding goal in 12 hours,” he says

“All because of the prep work we’ve put into this and basically nailing our product.

“Our real internal goal is raising over $US100,000.”

RiderBuds

Maurice says riders have been “putting up with sub-quality audio” for years.

He says the problems are inferior wind-noise cancelling, dislodging when putting on your helmet, discomfort around the ears, or breaking cables.Riderbuds earphones

We agree. It is difficult finding earphones that work well with helmets.

However, he claims RiderBuds will fit under any helmet, never get dislodged, stay comfortable, deliver crisp audio at any speed, protect your hearing and be tough enough to avoid cable breakages.

The earphones look good and come with both silicone and foam tips in various sizes to fit most ears.Riderbuds earphones

We would like to see a lightning connection option for iPhones and a Bluetooth version like SlimBuds.

However, Maurice says although their earphones are all wired, they feature a “very unique modular cable system”.Riderbuds earphones

“We’ve also been pointing our supporters to certain Bluetooth dongles we’ve been testing out and have been very happy with,” he says.

While the testimonials say they are comfortable, we’ve found wires that come straight out of earphones break and hurt your ears. We would expect a 90-degree bend at exit might be better.

However, we will reserve judgement for when a pair of the production earphones arrive here for testing early next year.

Stay tuned.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com
https://motorbikewriter.com/riderbuds-earphones-riders/