Reviews: Cobra PhoneLynx BT 215 Bluetooth Home Phone Adapter for iPhone

If the value of this accessory isn’t already obvious, that’s probably because you haven’t owned a wireless home phone system: paired with DECT or other wireless handsets, PhoneLynx is the missing link that can share a single cellular phone line with an entire house full of people. And the specifics of the way the accessory works are almost uniformly impressive. once you’ve paired PhoneLynx with your iPhone, picking up the landline phone leads to an actual dialtone and the ability to dial out: the number you enter is transferred correctly to the iPhone. Alternately, you can dial using the iPhone and switch over to the landline phone as desired; obviously, only one iPhone can make outgoing calls using PhoneLynx-connected landline phones at a time. If you’re using a wireless system, calls that come into either iPhone ring across all of the wirelessly connected phones pretty much just as you’d expect: there’s only a small 1- or 1.5-ring delay when PhoneLynx has to switch between iPhones to handle incoming calls, and sometimes a brief continued ring after the phone’s been answered. Depending on how many rings your phone has before it goes to voicemail, this may or may not be an issue for you.

The ring delays and PhoneLynx’s approach to iPhone pairing are the only signs that the Bluetooth chip used in BT 215 isn’t of the very latest variety. to pair, you’re required to hold down one of two illuminated buttons on PhoneLynx’s top, then manually enter a four-digit pin code into each of the two iPhones. once that’s done, lights on the unit flash blue to let you know pairing is active. If the link between your iPhone and PhoneLynx is broken—say, when you’ve left the house and then returned—you can manually press the button corresponding to your phone to re-pair, or just wait and let it happen automatically. Most of the time, the automatic re-pairing works. Ideally, Cobra would update BT 215 with newer Bluetooth chips for faster and easier pairing, but even if it did, only newer iPhones would support the improvements.

Sonically, the experience of using PhoneLynx will depend almost entirely on the quality of the landline phone you pair with it. Callers told us that we sounded more or less identical through the integrated microphone in the iPhone 4 as we did when using a landline wireless DECT phone with PhoneLynx. on the other hand, our listening experience was better on the iPhone than on the wireless phones we tested, since the landline phones don’t aggressively try to reduce hiss and static sounds in their own signals. Using the iPhone with PhoneLynx was no worse than making a call with a traditional landline connection, though.

Overall, while PhoneLynx isn’t perfect, we really liked how it performed as a transitional accessory between cellular and landline phones. Moreover, we love that it’s priced so much lower than alternatives that attempt to dock, charge, and otherwise transform the iPhone into the core of a semi-conventional desktop phone solution. If you’re trying to find a way to pipe your iPhone’s or iPhones’ cellular signals through a home system, we’d highly recommend BT 215; our only hope is for an even more advanced, same-priced sequel.

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