The promise of Shokz (formerly AfterShokz) bone-conduction headphones has always been an appealing one: you can listen to music without plugging your ears, so you can still hear the sounds around you. In practice, we haven't liked them very much. Until now, that is. The OpenRun Pro are the first of Shokz' headsets we genuinely like enough to keep using them regularly.
The trouble with previous versions of Shokz' headphones—and really most bone-conduction headphones—is also tied to their benefit. Since they don't put speakers directly in your ears, they have to send vibrations through the bones in your head. That can feel really weird if it's not done well! Senior associate editor Adrienne So couldn't stand the faint buzzing in her skull that she experienced on previous versions of AfterShokz' headsets, and other members of our team said they'd rather just not wear headphones at all.
That makes the OpenRun Pro (the latest in the line formerly called Aeropex) that much more impressive. In my own testing, I never noticed any of the problems my colleagues described from previous versions. Moreover, So, who also got to use the OpenRun Pro, told me that for the first time she was wearing them “for fun.”
This is the first pair of bone-conduction headphones I've reviewed. And until my colleagues told me that they'd had a problem with previous versions of the headset, I never would have suspected there were any problems with the concept. That fact alone might be the best compliment I can give the OpenRun Pro over its predecessors.
When I first tried out the OpenRun Pro, it took me a bit to mentally adjust to what I was hearing. The sound quality from the earpieces was deep and rich, and the headset was comfortable on my head. However, the audio felt just the tiniest bit muffled. Makes sense: The sound is traveling through a lot more of my cartilage and bone on its way to my inner ear, so it's going to sound a little different.
Once I got used to it, the difference was subtle enough that I never really noticed. In fact, at one point I used one of my older pairs of headphones, and only then did I remember that the OpenRun Pro sounded muffled.
Even if it had been more consistently annoying, the difference in sound quality between these and more traditional earbuds might've been worth it. Being able to hear the sound of passing cars or other people near me made me feel much more sure of my surroundings when out for a run or wandering around a city block. It was easier to exchange a quick word with a cashier. At least once, I forgot I was wearing it while having a full conversation with a friend.
