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Motorola Roadster 2 Wireless In-Car Speakerphone

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$138.99

$ 60 .99 $60.99

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About this item

  • Download the free My MotospeakApp and listen to incoming texts messages read aloud, then use voice commands to respond or initiate texts. Also receive caller ID and important battery call status voice alerts.
  • Roadster 2 automatically turns on and connects with your phone when you enter your car. When you're ready to leave it automatically turns off, saving battery life.
  • Listen to calls or stream music on a powerful 2-watt speaker or through car speakers using the FM transmitter
  • Have crystal clear calls with CrystalTalk technology on Roadster 2. Your speakerphone's dual microphone noise cancellation and echo control settings block out background noise in the car better than other speakerphones.
  • Motorola retail packaging includes: Motorola Roadster 2 Bluetooth In-Car Speakerphone, Car Charger, User Guide.


The Motorola Roadster 2 wireless in-car speakerphone is a simple solution for responsible driving. Hands free calling and texting keep your eyes on the road, and the convenient motion-activated on/off sensor saves battery life. The sleek and compact design looks great in any car, and the powerful 2-Watt speaker with HD audio packs a punch. Dual-mic CrystalTalk noise canceling technology helps you hear more of your call and less of the road, and voice prompts let you know when you’re connected, muted, or low on battery. And with 20 hours of talk time and three weeks on standby, you battery will last on even the longest road trips.


Belén Navarro
Reviewed in Mexico on September 1, 2017
Excelente desempeño. Sin ningún problema de ruido o interferencia. Duración increíble de la batería. Totalmente recomendable. Excelente relación precio calidad.
Belén Navarro
Reviewed in Mexico on September 1, 2017
Excelente desempeño. Sin ningún problema de ruido o interferencia. Duración increíble de la batería. Totalmente recomendable. Excelente relación precio calidad.
Dwideep
Reviewed in India on July 31, 2017
Over all is a good purchase.. getting d job done.. pretty cool features of auto shutdown and wakeup.. can pair two devices.. but at times fails to pair to my Nexus 5 but can solve this issue by simply restarting d device. Only glitch notices till now. Awesome battery life. Recommend strongly.. voice dial though ok google powered works well. Answers d call on voice command. All good till now.
Dwideep
Reviewed in India on July 31, 2017
Over all is a good purchase.. getting d job done.. pretty cool features of auto shutdown and wakeup.. can pair two devices.. but at times fails to pair to my Nexus 5 but can solve this issue by simply restarting d device. Only glitch notices till now. Awesome battery life. Recommend strongly.. voice dial though ok google powered works well. Answers d call on voice command. All good till now.
Saul Aguilera L.
Reviewed in Mexico on May 24, 2017
Excelente producto en cuanto a duracion de la bateria, volumen del altavoz, conectividad con el telefono y calidad de audio. Muy recomendable.
Saul Aguilera L.
Reviewed in Mexico on May 24, 2017
Excelente producto en cuanto a duracion de la bateria, volumen del altavoz, conectividad con el telefono y calidad de audio. Muy recomendable.
Loving life
Reviewed in Spain on March 25, 2015
Lástima que compré este aparato. Si hubiera sabido que no funcionara con Apple Iphone, no lo hubiera comprado. No cuidé de tomar en cuenta que ya pasó un mes. Una pérdida.
Loving life
Reviewed in Spain on March 25, 2015
Lástima que compré este aparato. Si hubiera sabido que no funcionara con Apple Iphone, no lo hubiera comprado. No cuidé de tomar en cuenta que ya pasó un mes. Una pérdida.
Fabio
Reviewed in Italy on January 17, 2015
Ottimo altoparlante, audio potente e chiaro.Peccato non sia impostabile la lingua italiana ma essendo un prodotto venduto prevalentemente negli USA è comprensibile questa mancanza.Unico difetto è un pò lento finchè arriva al momento in cui puoi usare la voce per dire "rispondi" o "ignora" la chiamata e intanto gli squilli vanno...in quel caso bisogna premere il tasto fisico con la cornetta e si risponde tranquillamente.Prodotto comunque ottimo e consigliato.
Fabio
Reviewed in Italy on January 17, 2015
Ottimo altoparlante, audio potente e chiaro.Peccato non sia impostabile la lingua italiana ma essendo un prodotto venduto prevalentemente negli USA è comprensibile questa mancanza.Unico difetto è un pò lento finchè arriva al momento in cui puoi usare la voce per dire "rispondi" o "ignora" la chiamata e intanto gli squilli vanno...in quel caso bisogna premere il tasto fisico con la cornetta e si risponde tranquillamente.Prodotto comunque ottimo e consigliato.
SA
Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2014
My experience is based on pairing the Roadster2 with the Samsung Galaxy S4. Pairing is easy, and the motospeak app works reasonably well. The device auto connects as soon as you get into your car. The FM is pretty decent, I have stopped using the audio jack in my car. Sound is very clear, and it responds very well to voice commands even though I have a very deep voice. It will read your texts, and you can respond to the text totally hands free. Battery life is very good.Maybe I have not figured out the correct way yet, but one annoyance is that Motospeak app does not respond to the button press on this speakerphone unless I turn bluetooth off/on on the phone once, when I get into the car. It will still auto-connect and let you answer calls handsfree and read your texts without this BT toggle, I just cannot get the app to respond to the button press to initiate a new call without the bluetooth restart. However, you don't have to use Motospeak, you can configure your phone to use Google instead. My S4 also has built in hands free mode, not sure if that is an Android default feature or not, but that would be one other option over the Motospeak app.Despite the minor annoyance, I prefer using Motospeak, I have installed a bluetooth widget that I can use to quickly toggle off/on when I enter the car. If someone has figured out a way to avoid this step then let me know.I have not used the car locator app, and don't see the need for it unless you are going to a game. Instead of installing an additional app, you can always use google maps to share your location with yourself.Since there is no Motospeak app for iphones, I got my wife the Jabra freeway. The only advantage that I will give the Jabra is the superior sound. I hesitate to use the phrase "better quality", the jabra has a deeper base and sounds more pleasant. However the sound from Roadster2 is very clear, but the device is smaller and cannot output the lower frequencies.I initially did not buy the freeway for myself because of lack of motospeak type of free app and concerns over voice assist subscription needed for Jabra, but it turns out that the subscription is not needed since my wife has configured her phone to allow Siri to be operated through the lock screen via the jabra, and Siri seems to be sufficient for her needs. I am not an iphone user and don't know whether Siri replicates whatever free functionality motospeak or google provides, that would be the decision point for choosing one over the other. If you have an android then I would recommend choosing Roadster2, for Iphone you can pick either depending on your personal preference.
SA
Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2014
My experience is based on pairing the Roadster2 with the Samsung Galaxy S4. Pairing is easy, and the motospeak app works reasonably well. The device auto connects as soon as you get into your car. The FM is pretty decent, I have stopped using the audio jack in my car. Sound is very clear, and it responds very well to voice commands even though I have a very deep voice. It will read your texts, and you can respond to the text totally hands free. Battery life is very good.Maybe I have not figured out the correct way yet, but one annoyance is that Motospeak app does not respond to the button press on this speakerphone unless I turn bluetooth off/on on the phone once, when I get into the car. It will still auto-connect and let you answer calls handsfree and read your texts without this BT toggle, I just cannot get the app to respond to the button press to initiate a new call without the bluetooth restart. However, you don't have to use Motospeak, you can configure your phone to use Google instead. My S4 also has built in hands free mode, not sure if that is an Android default feature or not, but that would be one other option over the Motospeak app.Despite the minor annoyance, I prefer using Motospeak, I have installed a bluetooth widget that I can use to quickly toggle off/on when I enter the car. If someone has figured out a way to avoid this step then let me know.I have not used the car locator app, and don't see the need for it unless you are going to a game. Instead of installing an additional app, you can always use google maps to share your location with yourself.Since there is no Motospeak app for iphones, I got my wife the Jabra freeway. The only advantage that I will give the Jabra is the superior sound. I hesitate to use the phrase "better quality", the jabra has a deeper base and sounds more pleasant. However the sound from Roadster2 is very clear, but the device is smaller and cannot output the lower frequencies.I initially did not buy the freeway for myself because of lack of motospeak type of free app and concerns over voice assist subscription needed for Jabra, but it turns out that the subscription is not needed since my wife has configured her phone to allow Siri to be operated through the lock screen via the jabra, and Siri seems to be sufficient for her needs. I am not an iphone user and don't know whether Siri replicates whatever free functionality motospeak or google provides, that would be the decision point for choosing one over the other. If you have an android then I would recommend choosing Roadster2, for Iphone you can pick either depending on your personal preference.
Gordon Yang
Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2014
I love this speakerphone! It performs beautifully for my set up. I have a Nokia Lumia Icon from Verizon running Windows Phone. I actually bought a Jabra Freeway after trying out Motorola Roadster 2 on my phone and thought that the Jabra might do better after I read all of the comparison reviews. Well, after trying out the Motorola Roadster 2 for a week, switching to the Jabra model and trying it for another week, I am now returning the Jabra and getting the Motorola again. I'm not sure why all of the comparison reviews ranked the Jabra higher, as the performance of the Roadster 2, at least when paired with my specific phone was far superior.Here are the major factors that are making me go back to the Roadster 2:Launching Phone Commands! This was by far the most annoying part of the Jabra that worked very poorly. On the Jabra I have to press the voice button, then say "phone commands" and then wait for it to launch the phone features so I can actually dial. This wouldn't be that bad by itself, but I found that when I tried to say "phone commands", the Jabra unit would fail to recognize that about 90 percent of the time. I hated the two step process, and I hate the fact that it didn't even work with my phone very well. On the Roadster 2, I just hit the voice button and my phone prompted me immediately for what to say, and it recognized my commands far more accurately than the Jabra. Maybe it's my phone, maybe it's Jabra's embedded software. Who knows? I just know the Roadster 2 worked a lot better when it came to using voice commands.The Jabra is supposed to boast a more powerful speaker and supposed to have better call quality than the Roadster 2. My experience was the exact opposite. When the Roadster 2 was paired to my phone, I could hear calls loud and crisp, navigation prompts came through very clearly too, even cutting through music I was playing on the radio at the same time. That's how good the speaker is on the Motorola. The Jabra was too quiet, even when I maxed out the volume on both the speaker and the phone settings. I could hear calls and navigation prompts clearly, but it didn't seem to be loud enough. Sometimes the sound would be fine and loud enough, but it seemed like the Jabra was trying to auto adjust the volume and wasn't working well. The Motorola had more consistent loudness across the board.The Jabra is quite heavy in comparison, so at least in my car, my sun visor could barely keep the speakerphone up. The Roadster 2 is very compact and lightweight, but packs a much higher punch in loudness and clarity I did not expect from its size. The Roadster 2 does not have the same issue on my sun visor and is held up quite nicely. The grey color matches my interior a little better too and I do not fear my sun visor falling down.Outgoing calls for both the Jabra and Roadster appeared to perform about the same, at least from all of the test calls I made to people. I asked for their feedback and they could not hear much of a difference in how both speakerphones picked up my voice. The other side could hear me clearly and tell what I was saying no matter which speakerphone I was truing, but could definitely tell that I was on a speakerphone.The Jabra's button layout is a but annoying, once mounted, the volume up and down buttons aren't obvious, on the Roadster 2, I can more easily see the buttons when mounted. Also, all of the buttons on the Roadster 2 are backlit, but the Jabra is not. This is a huge bonus when you are trying to use the speakerphone at night and you want to more quickly figure out where the buttons are.The FM tuning feature on both seem to work about the same, which is to say, not greatest. I'm in the Chicago area and it's hard to find blank frequencies that work consistently. I found myself not using this feature much on both.The Roadster 2 currently is available for only 60 percent of the price of the Jabra Freeway on Amazon. So it wins out on current pricing as of 11-2-2014, but at MSRP, they are roughly equal.If you buy this or the Jabra Freeway, I have no doubt you will be happy with the speakerphone performance itself on both models, but at least for my case, the Roadster 2 wins out. I would definitely give both a try and see which one works better for your set up. I found myself fumbling with the Jabra model more often while driving, and it was definitely more distracting than helpful. The Roadster 2 did not require nearly as much effort to operate and I found it behaved more like an actual "in-car" system.My sister and brother and law both have the Jabra, and they have been very happy with the performance. Maybe they don't have the same "two step" process to launch phone commands, or they may not use that feature.Both the Roadster 2 and Jabra work very well, but I think the Roadster 2 is currently the better value, given the available pricing.FOLLOW UP POST TO COMMENT: I drive a sports car with a tuned exhaust and I get tons of road noise in the cabin of my car, but when maxed out on volume on the device and at about 80% volume set on my phone, I can hear the speaker OK. I'm still using this 2+ years later and it's still performing mostly flawlessly. Some issues I discovered is that sometimes the speaker will unpair itself and I have to turn the power off and back on. No big deal since at least the switch is easily accessed on the side. Also, I bought a super long microUSB cable and have it routed from my sun visor to a USB charger in my cigarette lighter instead of using the charger it comes with. It's a super clean setup and I can easily unplug the USB cable when I want to save the built in battery and not have it constantly charging. When on battery, the speakerphone still lasts several hours with straight talking, or days if I am not using it heavily. It's nice since it announces when the battery is low and I can just slip the USB cable back into the charger. Since the review, I've also updated my phone to run Windows 10 and everything still works great with Cortana and/or voice commands. The voice button calls up Cortana immediately and I can utilize all of her functions with just pushing a button on the speakerphone. Since I got the speakerphone, it feels like the response time has slowed down a little with voice commands, but this might have more to do with the age of my phone at this point.
Gordon Yang
Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2014
I love this speakerphone! It performs beautifully for my set up. I have a Nokia Lumia Icon from Verizon running Windows Phone. I actually bought a Jabra Freeway after trying out Motorola Roadster 2 on my phone and thought that the Jabra might do better after I read all of the comparison reviews. Well, after trying out the Motorola Roadster 2 for a week, switching to the Jabra model and trying it for another week, I am now returning the Jabra and getting the Motorola again. I'm not sure why all of the comparison reviews ranked the Jabra higher, as the performance of the Roadster 2, at least when paired with my specific phone was far superior.Here are the major factors that are making me go back to the Roadster 2:Launching Phone Commands! This was by far the most annoying part of the Jabra that worked very poorly. On the Jabra I have to press the voice button, then say "phone commands" and then wait for it to launch the phone features so I can actually dial. This wouldn't be that bad by itself, but I found that when I tried to say "phone commands", the Jabra unit would fail to recognize that about 90 percent of the time. I hated the two step process, and I hate the fact that it didn't even work with my phone very well. On the Roadster 2, I just hit the voice button and my phone prompted me immediately for what to say, and it recognized my commands far more accurately than the Jabra. Maybe it's my phone, maybe it's Jabra's embedded software. Who knows? I just know the Roadster 2 worked a lot better when it came to using voice commands.The Jabra is supposed to boast a more powerful speaker and supposed to have better call quality than the Roadster 2. My experience was the exact opposite. When the Roadster 2 was paired to my phone, I could hear calls loud and crisp, navigation prompts came through very clearly too, even cutting through music I was playing on the radio at the same time. That's how good the speaker is on the Motorola. The Jabra was too quiet, even when I maxed out the volume on both the speaker and the phone settings. I could hear calls and navigation prompts clearly, but it didn't seem to be loud enough. Sometimes the sound would be fine and loud enough, but it seemed like the Jabra was trying to auto adjust the volume and wasn't working well. The Motorola had more consistent loudness across the board.The Jabra is quite heavy in comparison, so at least in my car, my sun visor could barely keep the speakerphone up. The Roadster 2 is very compact and lightweight, but packs a much higher punch in loudness and clarity I did not expect from its size. The Roadster 2 does not have the same issue on my sun visor and is held up quite nicely. The grey color matches my interior a little better too and I do not fear my sun visor falling down.Outgoing calls for both the Jabra and Roadster appeared to perform about the same, at least from all of the test calls I made to people. I asked for their feedback and they could not hear much of a difference in how both speakerphones picked up my voice. The other side could hear me clearly and tell what I was saying no matter which speakerphone I was truing, but could definitely tell that I was on a speakerphone.The Jabra's button layout is a but annoying, once mounted, the volume up and down buttons aren't obvious, on the Roadster 2, I can more easily see the buttons when mounted. Also, all of the buttons on the Roadster 2 are backlit, but the Jabra is not. This is a huge bonus when you are trying to use the speakerphone at night and you want to more quickly figure out where the buttons are.The FM tuning feature on both seem to work about the same, which is to say, not greatest. I'm in the Chicago area and it's hard to find blank frequencies that work consistently. I found myself not using this feature much on both.The Roadster 2 currently is available for only 60 percent of the price of the Jabra Freeway on Amazon. So it wins out on current pricing as of 11-2-2014, but at MSRP, they are roughly equal.If you buy this or the Jabra Freeway, I have no doubt you will be happy with the speakerphone performance itself on both models, but at least for my case, the Roadster 2 wins out. I would definitely give both a try and see which one works better for your set up. I found myself fumbling with the Jabra model more often while driving, and it was definitely more distracting than helpful. The Roadster 2 did not require nearly as much effort to operate and I found it behaved more like an actual "in-car" system.My sister and brother and law both have the Jabra, and they have been very happy with the performance. Maybe they don't have the same "two step" process to launch phone commands, or they may not use that feature.Both the Roadster 2 and Jabra work very well, but I think the Roadster 2 is currently the better value, given the available pricing.FOLLOW UP POST TO COMMENT: I drive a sports car with a tuned exhaust and I get tons of road noise in the cabin of my car, but when maxed out on volume on the device and at about 80% volume set on my phone, I can hear the speaker OK. I'm still using this 2+ years later and it's still performing mostly flawlessly. Some issues I discovered is that sometimes the speaker will unpair itself and I have to turn the power off and back on. No big deal since at least the switch is easily accessed on the side. Also, I bought a super long microUSB cable and have it routed from my sun visor to a USB charger in my cigarette lighter instead of using the charger it comes with. It's a super clean setup and I can easily unplug the USB cable when I want to save the built in battery and not have it constantly charging. When on battery, the speakerphone still lasts several hours with straight talking, or days if I am not using it heavily. It's nice since it announces when the battery is low and I can just slip the USB cable back into the charger. Since the review, I've also updated my phone to run Windows 10 and everything still works great with Cortana and/or voice commands. The voice button calls up Cortana immediately and I can utilize all of her functions with just pushing a button on the speakerphone. Since I got the speakerphone, it feels like the response time has slowed down a little with voice commands, but this might have more to do with the age of my phone at this point.
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