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LG TONE-FP5 TONE Free True Wireless Bluetooth Earbuds FP5 - Active Noise Cancelling , Black

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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Tuesday, May 21
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Features

  • Note : If the size of the earbud tips does not match the size of your ear canals or the headset is not worn properly in your ears, you may not obtain the correct sound qualities or call performance. Change the earbud tips to ones that fit more snugly in your ear
  • More immersive than ever, less noise than before Meet LGs noise cancelling headphones unique ANC; built-in high-performance upper microphone detects external noise, while the inner microphone cancels out unwanted noise*
  • New ergonomic contoured ear seal design conforms to the shape of your ear, providing a comfortable and stylish fit; Ear gels made with comfortable hypoallergenic medical-grade silicone for all-day comfort
  • Experience Meridians Hi-Fi sound with a lifelike sense of space; Built-in equalizer delivers impressive bass and treble tones for a life-like live recording sound with pristine clarity
  • Enjoy up to eight hours of play time on a single charge and up to 22 hours** of play time with the charging case. In a hurry? Just five minutes of charging will get you an hour of play time
  • TONE Free earbuds are rated IPX4 water resistant*** and can handle splashes from any direction. Whats in the Box: Earbuds, case, extra ear gels, USB-C charging cable, USB-C to 3.5mm audio jack cable, warranty card

Description

Free your sound with the LG TONE Free FP5—tune into premium audio and tune out the rest with Active Noise Cancellation. It reduces background noise, whether you’re on a plane, working out, or on public transportation. Plus, a contoured design fits to the shape of your ear for comfortable listening. Based on internal testing using pink noise with Active Noise Cancellation feature turned on and off. Active Noise Cancellation feature must be manually turned on. The earbud batteries and charging case last for 8 and 14 hours of music play time respectively when Active Noise Cancellation function is turned off. Duration of use may vary depending on methods of use and other factors. IPX4 Water Resistance: Earbuds tested under controlled laboratory conditions with an IPX4 rating. Resistant to splashed water. Dry before using. Do not charge while wet. Case has not been tested for IPX4.


Brand: LG


Model Name: TONE-FP5


Color: Black


Form Factor: In Ear


Connectivity Technology: Bluetooth 5.0


Product Dimensions: 1.12 x 0.84 x 0.92 inches


Item Weight: 1.83 ounces


Item model number: TONE-FP5


Batteries: 2 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Date First Available: August 19, 2021


Department: Unisex Adult


Manufacturer: LG Electronics


Item Weight: 52 Grams


Units: 1.0 Count


Number Of Items: 1


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Tuesday, May 21

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Noise Cancellation Mostly Non-Existant
Let's start with the negatives: - Noise cancelation seems mostly passive. I can tell the slightest pressure, but only the frequency of a breeze through leaves is actually filtered out. The Low "comfort" level seems to do nothing, with the "High" making you think it might be so strong as its uncomfortable. It actually is barely there on High, and not anywhere near the pressure feel of expensive noise cancellation that actively filters all frequencies. In a room with air conditioner, no filter. Traffic? No filter. Someone talking, slightly filtered. They seem to trick you with this false sense of noise cancellation because they default to Ambient. That's because what actually happens when you turn the "ambient" on is that it amplifies sounds, so you might think that's normal. No, it amplifies sounds louder than if you weren't wearing them. So, when you first turn on Active Noise Cancellation (ANC), it gets really quiet. But then, when you select "Off" you barely notice a change. It's a slide of hand, because it's really just between what should be called "Amplify the outside" and "Passive". But going from "Off" to "ANC" just filters out this tiny band. You're not sleeping on an airplane with this. I could hear the road, engine, and traffic in a car. I could hear a cat making noises in the other room. Sure, if I turn up the music loud I can't, but that's not noise cancellation. Plus, unless you have a perfect seal, you can't even tell, at all. So, does it cancel anything? Only if you get a perfect seal and only for a tiny band of sound that honestly doesn't matter. * I believe I've actually figured out who these are for, and when ANC/Ambient actually matter: When you are listening to music. Then, you can actually tell the difference between ANC/Off/Ambient. You can actually hear someone trying to talk to you when you have the music loud, though you will have to turn down a little bit to have a conversation, but you don't necessarily have to stop the music. Under ANC, the music sounds a bit "cleaner" by taking out that little bit of outside noise, but only if you have a great seal, and usually at the cost of battery. Honestly, I'd bounce between High and Off, and would tap things around me, make a constant blowing sound with my mouth, and even with a great seal, did absolutely nothing. But, what does make a difference is Ambient. So, this is for people who have to hear voices or traffic (cyclists, runners, office). ** Ambient is the point, ANC is not. Turn on Ambient while walking or biking near people, traffic, bus, subway, train for announcements. ** Turn Off if you don't want to hear those people, while shopping, listening to a book, in a phone call, etc. Leave it "Off" when listening to music to save battery. Because I promise you, you will hear every keyboard tap, every cat purr, and every truck going by outside with the ANC on or off. ** When to use ANC? Only use ANC if you have no other option and an air vent or a gentle breeze through the leaves in a quiet park is the only thing you need to cancel. Sad, but, there you go. Reverse your thinking with these, and 99% of the time, it's Off or Ambient, not ANC or Off. - The gel tips hurt as the edges press into your ears. Because the noise cancellation does almost nothing that I can hear, I went to my normal large to get a full seal per their instructions (and common sense). Pulling them out of my ears catches and flips the gels inside out, and are painful and are nowhere near the noise cancellation of my Sony MX4 over-the-ear headphones. I didn't expect them to be, as I spent hundreds on the MX4s, and these are under $70. But I was led by reviews from several on Youtube that these were world-class. If this is world-class for in-ear, then I think I'm done with in-ear noise cancellation, because it was a complete waste of money here. And I use large all the time. All my Pixel Buds and Jabra were large. Unlike those, this is a stem design, and it hurts. With the large, and even after switching back to the medium, the gel tips somehow grab my ears, and flip inside out, digging into my ears, and pulling out with the gels completely inside out. - Light. Not light as in "how did they make these quality earbuds so light" but as in "they feel like cheap plastic toys out of a quarter machine." - The LG App is absolute hot garbage. In the Apple App Store, it has 1.4 stars, and for good reason. After playing with it for about an hour, it locked up, and never started again. Can't change settings, can't change EQ, just absolute junk as you'll see from every Apple App Store review. Mine just sits on the logo screen until I take out my earbuds, put them in the case, close the case, wait, then open the case, then open the app, and it starts working again. And the update even on a FIOS connection for a firmware is pretty slow. Not sure if this is the download or upload, but never seen earbuds or headphones take quite this long, almost 20 minutes. - Weak magnets on the case lid. The earbuds stick inside fairly strong, but if you compare this lid to say a lid from Pixel Buds, this lid is maybe 30% of that strength. - Arrived with no charge in earbuds or case. I've never had that happen before. I had to find an old USB-A adapter to plug them in as I didn't have my own USB-C charger on me, and they only provide an A to C and NO brick. - Works on iOS, but doesn't allow for Mic modes. The voice is clear, and whisper mode is interesting if you really need it, but my voice in recordings, in calls, in Teams, and in Zoom sounds decent but with no lows. You get mids and highs, and you sound like you are a bit too far away from the mic, as though the mic were on your desk, and you pushed your chair back a foot too far away from it. Not the worst, but not at the level of a boom mic single ear Plantronics either. Ok, the positives: - The sound quality is better than most earbuds not only at this price but at triple this price. And not just better, it's excellent! These earbuds have a nice full range, full and punchy lows, solid mids, and lightly muted (but acceptable) highs (and I set an EQ to soften them more). The EQ is customizable and has great selections to start with (when the app works). I do like the Immersive and 3D Sound Stage and usually leave it on 3D Sound Stage (as this also helps compensate for relatively no noise cancellation). However, this makes audiobooks and podcasts sound like they're in a barrel or in front of a reverb plate. Good for rock, bad for voice, but easy change (when app works). - It charges really fast for not being a fast charge device. The case and the buds arrived dead (above), but they charged very fast and I was ready to go with enough charge in the case and earbuds after 10 minutes to use them for quite a while. I don't know about battery life, this is my first 4 hours with them. - It's a great price if you just want good/acceptable voice quality sometimes and to mostly listen. Honestly, if you just use them to listen. This price range usually offers only basic connectivity, and this does go above the minimum by quite a lot. The low rating is due to Noise Cancellation, the one thing I really wanted in these as I only use ANC in headphones, but don't want to walk around with headphones on when out and about. - The touch works as expected and is minimally customizable, making these like the Pixel Bud A's, mostly. And, like those, you can't slide to volume up or down, but by default have to tap on the left and right ears, which is not very useful, since the small volume increments will have you tapping on your ears like a drummer to get significant volume change. I recommend changing these to something like, 1 tap on left, voice assistant. 1 tap on right, play/pause. 2 taps on either for next. 3 taps on either for previous. For some odd reason, they put volume on 2 taps on both, and next track on 3 taps on both. If you are like every other human on earth, you will skip tracks far more than change volume (or change to previous track as I recommend), so make that two taps. Luckily, they do make this customizable, which is surprising at this price point. ** One small negative on touch. Every technology in the world does long press for voice assistant (think power buttons on Android or iPhone), but in these, long press is hardwired to only turn from ANC to Ambient, and back again. As I said, I think Ambient might be useful, but not ANC. I'd like to long press one side for assistant, long press the other side to switch between Off and Ambient (and not ANC), but they don't offer this at all. I'm used to the Sony MX4 where either I can start talking and it switches to ambient, or I hold my right hand up to my ear to temporarily allow ambient. I will say, I wish my MX4 headphones had louder ambient like these, but the ANC on those is infinitely more impressive. Additional Notes: If you find a silicon case for this, beware of claims of "waterproof". The recommended case cover claims that it is waterproof, and is absolutely not. So, check out all extras you look for with these and read the reviews carefully. Summary: I thought $70 was too good to be true for what YouTubers were calling best in class Active Noise Cancelation, audio quality, great battery, Ambient Voice mode, don't fall out, and comfort. I was right, it was too good to be true. Active Noise Cancelation was barely noticeable, they aren't comfortable if you use gels tips large enough to actually seal. However, they are reasonably priced if you want clean Audio Quality, quick charge, what seems great battery, a niche usable Ambient mode, don't fall out under intense shaking, and comfort if you go with a smaller gel tip that doesn't exactly seal. Honestly, that's worth $70. Adding in the UV light and audio cable for the FP9 now seems very overpriced, and the wireless charger for the FP8 might be a more usable feature considering you don't get a brick or a full USB-C to USB-C cable anyways. Still, $70 for the features that work well along with my own USB-C cable, is a good buy. When to pass? When you actually need active noise cancellation. These are not the earbuds you're looking for. And, as I bought these for exactly that reason, already owning 2 pairs of Pixel Buds, Pixel Bud As, and a pair of Jabra sports, for me, it was a complete waste of money to get mostly what I already had, and had already paid more for. If I didn't have any? I might consider these again, especially on a budget, possibly if they had some kind of foam or alternative gel tip. Whatever they included is just painful The next comparable quality in those other brands is around the $150 price range. On the other hand, the cheapest skull candy never hurt my ears like this regardless of tip size ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2022 by DeWayne

  • Great for a non-techy person
They look exactly as they say they do so there's no need for pictures I've had these since early February (currently late August) and have not had most of the problems listed by other reviewers. My favorite things about these headphones is the size. They are VERY small. The case fits perfectly in my hands and I like how small the buds are as well. They go unnoticed easily. The case is very sleek and attractive with the matte and the buds themselves aren't too shabby either. They don't look cheap. My boyfriend agreed they look very well made and attractive, and fit into your ears in a very snug, high end type way. The TouchPads are easy to use and with the app you can customize the controls. I rarely use them though bc I find the controls to be hard to remember. I find the app to be quite handy. The headphones connect extremely quickly when you open the case. The first time I connected them it was SO quick and easy, I was shocked. For reference, I am not tech-savvy or a tech-snob. I have only ever used cheap products so my frame of reference is different. I've used the soundcore TWE by anker and the SkullCandy Evos and those were both just fine, but the Tone Free FP5 surpass them by many miles. I don't care much about noise canceling because for me, when the music is playing I'm able to tune everything out. That said- with my previous TWE buds I would be able to hear things with my headphones any lower than 90% especially if they're louder sounds or closer to me. With these I don't notice that as much. If I focus hard I can hear my mom playing music in the car, the shouts of people at the park while I stroll, honking of cars while I ride my bike (I of course turn them down if I'm on the road) etc, but it's faint and very easy for me to tune out as long as I'm not having sensory overload. I don't find that turning on noise canceling makes all that much of a difference. Things do sound different when you turn it on, but not by a lot. I don't think it's worth the battery it uses. As other people have described, the noise canceling does create a sort of white noise sound. I can't hear it while my music is playing but inbetween songs or when I pause it I can. It's faint and easy to tune out for me, but if you're someone who is unable to isolate sounds and gets overloaded by sounds quickly this may be a problem for you, but I would still reccoment trying them and seeing. Ambient mode works well, but I don't find that the two settings (conversation vs whatever the other one is) make much of a difference. They do definitely sound different but I don't think they do what they say they do. Putting it on conversation mode won't actually let u hear conversations around you, at least not distinctly. Rather just a drowned out sort of chattering, like white noise I guess. To hear someone clearly you'd have to also adjust your volume rather low. I still use them when I'm on my bike paired eith 50% volume and it helps me being able to hear someone shouting or honking. I dont know the word but I'm not someone who is super picky about sound quality. I listen to a lot of different types of music, I like to listen to choral arrangements (music major), alot of rock/punk/emo/90s grunge, indie (?), and pop. Rock and indie are my two most listened to genres and rock has lots of electric guitar and drums, so the ONLY sound thing I'm picky on is that the guitars are distinguishable. They shouldn't sound like static or blend in with everything else. I want to be able to hear them. These earbuds do that perfectly. If you're someone that is picky about sound quality or has very specific things you're looking for then your experience might be different, but if you're just an everage Joe (jane) like me who has no real standards then I'd say this is a spot on observation. There are different sound settings and lots of customization options in app, but since I don't know what most of it means or does, it's gone mostly untouched. The buds charge very quickly and hold a charge very well. I haven't measured how long in between charges but it's usually a ??? week. I use them probably averagely 8-15 hrs a week just depending and I don't charge them often enough to even definitively say how much. I find the volume to be well. No problems. Usually 100% volume is too loud for me and I listen at 70-80. The thing I absolutely HATE about these headphones is the feature that pauses them when you remove them. I'm aware most people like this, I HATE it. I'm a very itchy person so I usually itch the inside of my ear or near my ear about four times an hour when I'm wearing buds, which means they're removed often to itch. It pausing when I do this is INFURIATING. Now you caaan turn this feature off in the app but it doesn't really turn it off. It just changes how it works. It disconnects the bud temporarily and reconnects it when you put it back in. So the bud still in your ear continues to play while the removed one turns off. This is better, sure, but annoying because it can take 3-5 seconds for it to reconnect. This isn't all that long but it definitely puts a dent in my listening experience and is quite bizarre. To offset this, I cover the sensor as I take it out so that it still detects as in my ear. Once every 15ish uses it will randomly disconnect and then reconnect when you turn them on, or sometimes in the first four or five minutes of use. And occasionally you have to manually recconrct them, but both these occurrences are rare. I do feel a bit of ear fatigue when wearing these. They go far into my ears which I prefer. They don't fall out when I smile or run which is great, though when I smile or chew they do move and will have to be readjusted probably once in a five minute period. They protrude out at the bottom next to the stem which is what causes my ears to become sore. I beleive the shape of that part is what specifically helps keep them in your ear though, so not much can be done on that. I have unusually small ears so this might not be a problem for anyone else. Every earbud I've used has given me this problem in different places. The sore-ness starts usually after an hour of use but sometimes sooner. I have worn these in the rain (granted not hard rain, usually misting or light rain. ) and have had 0 issues. Overall, i adore these and will purchase the next generation after these break! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2022 by Bailey Morris

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