Skip to main content

Audio-Technica’s latest earbuds snap together to save power

Audio-Technica ATH-CKS50TW2.
Audio-Technica
The CES 2025 logo.
Read and watch our complete CES coverage here

Audio-Technica’s (A-T) presence at CES 2025 is pretty low-key this year, but it does have one clever trick up its sleeve when it comes to wireless earbuds: “Magnetic Switch” technology. The company’s new ATH-CKS50TW2 (what a mouthful) take 2022’s superb mega-bass ATH-CKS50TW earbuds and reimagine them with a new shape, a new charging case, and cool new feature — if you don’t have the charging case with you, just bring the two buds near each other and their embedded magnets will hold them together while powering them down. You can buy them right now for $149.

Audio-Technica ATH-CKS50TW2.
Audio-Technica

Not that you’ll likely have to worry much about running out of power. Improving on their predecessor’s already mammoth 20-hour-per-charge capacity, the CKS50TW2 get a claimed 25 hours per charge, with an additional 40 hours standing by in the charging case. That’s totally nuts. To put it in perspective, the ATH-CKS50TW2 can last as long on a single charge as the Apple AirPods Pro 2 can last when you include their charging case’s supply.

Recommended Videos

Other improvements include the addition of wireless charging, something the ATH-CKS50TW lacked, and better protection from water and dust with an IP55 rating (as compared to the CKS50TW’s IPX4). The earbuds have ANC and transparency modes, with dual high-performance MEMS microphones and beamforming technology for calling.

Audio-Technica ATH-CKS50TW2.
Audio-Technica

A-T says they use a set of 9mm high-definition drivers, specially made by the company, which sounds like the same units that were used on the CKS50TW. What we don’t know yet is what kind of codec support is included. The CKS50TW offered aptX Adaptive (in addition to AAC and SBC), which allowed some Android phones to deliver higher-quality audio at up to 24-bit/96kHz.

A-T hasn’t said which Bluetooth version is on board, but the CKS50TW2 maintain the Multipoint capability from their predecessors, along with customizable controls and EQ settings in the A-T Connect app.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen is a contributing editor to Digital Trends' Audio/Video section, where he obsesses over the latest wireless…
Final Audio’s latest wireless earbuds are shockingly affordable
Final Audio ZE3000 SV.

Boutique Japanese audio company, Final Audio, has just announced its latest wireless earbuds and they're priced at a surprisingly accessible $100. The ZE3000 SV are effectively the second generation of the company's $149 ZE3000 -- some of the best-sounding earbuds I've ever tested under $200 -- and yet they appear to have many improvements and a much lower price. They'll be available on Amazon and Final Audio's website in the coming days.

While the ZE3000 are notable for their audio quality, Final neglected to include many of the features we've come to expect on wireless earbuds, like noise cancellation and Bluetooth Multipoint. They can do hi-res audio, but only via Qualcomm's aptX Adaptive codec, which isn't available on the most popular smartphones.

Read more
Hands-on review with the Livv Pro: sports headphones guaranteed to turn heads
Livv Pro.

When Mark Clayton was building his career as a wide receiver with the Baltimore Ravens and St. Louis Rams, he probably didn’t imagine that life after the NFL would lead him to challenge massive audio brands like Beats, Bose, Sony, and Apple, but that’s exactly what he’s doing.

Clayton, now 42 years old, is about to launch the Livv Pro, a set of “luxury sports headphones,” that look like nothing else on the market. With their unique (and patented) zig-zag headband shape, triangular earcups, and metallic gold accents, the Livv Pro are designed to give a more secure fit than traditional wireless headphones without sacrificing the audio quality and versatility you’d expect from those other brands.

Read more
1More’s budget-friendly ANC headphones get hi-res audio and more battery life
1More SonoFlow SE HQ31.

1More has just released its latest ultra-affordable set of noise-canceling headphones and, as we've become accustomed to, it's managed to pack even more features for the same price. The SonoFlow SE HQ31 cost $60 -- the same price as the SonoFlow SE HQ30 -- and add wired/wireless hi-res audio compatibility, spatial audio, a claimed up-to-90 hour battery life, better noise cancellation, and wired connection options. They comes in four different colors and you can buy them right now on Amazon.

The design has also undergone an evolution. Instead of the sharply defined edges of previous SonoFlow models, like the original version and the Pro HQ51, the HQ31 features rounded countours, making them look a little more like Soundcore's Life series of wireless headphones.

Read more
OSZAR »