Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen)
What is the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen)?
2017’s Echo Plus was a bit of a strange device. With its built-in Zigbee hub, it was designed to give you a smart home without the need for additional boxes, but failed to deliver the controls needed. It was also a throwback to the original Echo. This year, the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) feels like a better product.
A neater design, a more useful smart hub and improved audio all make this the more premium Echo device that the original Plus failed to be. That said, it still lacks the sound quality to really rival the main music players: the Apple HomePod, Google Home Max and Sonos One.
Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) – Design and build quality
As with the rest of the revamped Echo range, the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) has been redesigned from the ground up. Its cylindrical body is covered in fabric, with a choice of black, grey or white options. It’s a big step up from the original Echo Plus.
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Now, the Echo Plus looks much more like the regular Amazon Echo. At 148 x 99 x 99mm, the Echo Plus is the same height as its little brother, only a little fatter.
The only thing I miss about the original is its mechanical dial used for volume control. Instead, the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) uses the standard button layout as its siblings. On top, there are volume buttons, a microphone mute to stop Alexa from listening, and an activation button, so you can ask a question without having to say ‘Alexa’ first.
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From the small holes on top, you can see that the Echo Plus has seven far-field microphones for picking up sound. Generally, the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) picked up my voice-prompts regardless of distance.
Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) – Features
As the Echo Plus uses the cloud-based Alexa smart assistant, it has the same range of main features as the other Echo smart speakers. I’ve covered these in more detail in my Amazon Alexa guide, but I’ll go over some of the finer points here.
As a general assistant, Alexa does well. It can pull information from your calendar (including G Suite accounts, which the Google Home can’t do), give you weather reports, let you set multiple timers and answer simple questions.
Alexa isn’t quite as easy to talk to as the Google Assistant and needs more stringently worded sentences to respond. And, as Amazon can’t use Google services, directions and local business results aren’t as accurate or as useful as with Google’s service.
The Amazon Alexa Skills store remains one of the system’s highlights. Each Skill lets you expand what the Echo is capable of, such as giving you live Tube updates. As each Skill is rated, it makes it easier to search out and find the quality ones, avoiding the trash.
Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) – Smart home
The Zigbee hub is no longer unique to the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen), also featuring in the Echo Show. If you have both on your home network, then the Echo smart speakers act as repeaters giving you greater coverage. The problem with the original was that the smart hub wasn’t that useful, let down by the software support.
This time around, Amazon has improved the app, making the Zigbee hub a potentially useful product. Add in Philips Hue bulbs, for example, and you can now use the app to set the colour, as well as toggling the lights on or off. You still get more control of scenes and a wider range of colours if you use the Philips Hue app, but the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) gives enough control for many.
It’s stlil not a perfect system, though. I could pair a Philips Hue Dimmer Switch with this new Echo Plus, but the Alexa app didn’t let me do anything with the button.
Otherwise, it’s smart home as usual. A wide variety of devices are supported, and it’s easy to create routines so that multiple things can happen when you say one trigger word.
The Echo Plus now has a temperature sensor built in. From the app (or by asking), you can get the current temperature, although it seemed to take a few seconds for the app to convert from Fahrenheit to Celsius. However, you can also use the information in a routine, say turning on a fan if the temperature exceeds a certain level. You can see what Amazon is starting to do, and I imagine that future versions of the app will provide greater interaction and control between different smart home devices.
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Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) – Sound quality
Inside, there’s a 0.8-inch tweeter and 3-inch subwoofer. The combination is far more impressive than on the original Echo Plus. Bass is loud and thumping, and the high end is produced faithfully. If I’m being very critical, the mid-range is a little more compressed, and some of the subtlety is lost in music. The Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) is definitely not a HomePod or Sonos One competitor and loses out to both of these speakers for musical fidelity.
But price is important. The Echo Plus is only £139.99, while the HomePod is a whopping £319 and the Sonos One is £199. In terms of price and performance, the Echo Plus stands up well and is definitely a device that I could listen to music on.
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Why buy the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen)?
If you just want a slightly more powerful Echo speaker than the Amazon Echo Dot (3rd Gen), you’re probably better off looking at the current (2017) Amazon Echo. But, if you want a smart speaker that gives that bit more musical prowess without breaking the bank, the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) is well-priced, particularly given its integrated Zigbee hub and mid-range music credentials. A vast improvement over the original.
Verdict
With its better looks, more powerful audio and vastly improved smart home control, the Amazon Echo Plus (2nd Gen) is no longer a curiosity, but a worthy smart speaker in its own right
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