This is our Sony SRS XB30 Buttons Explained manual for this Bluetooth Extra Bass speaker. Now it has seven buttons across its top panel. E.g. Including the EXTRA BASS, PHONE-BATT, Play-Pause, ADD, Volume UP and DOWN, and Power-Pairing buttons. There’s also an NFC sensor just in front of the ADD button.
Knowing how to use these allows you to fully enjoy the many advanced features of this cordless speaker, and we want you to fully benefit from the speakers you buy. So here we give our version of these Sony SRS XB30 buttons guide. In short, for each button, we tell what it does along with how and when to press it to do the things that most people want to do with a portable speaker.
In the port panel, sealed with a rigid plastic cover, we find the barrel style DC input charging port. There is also an auxiliary (AUX) input port, Called Audio In here. And since this is a power bank speaker, we find a USB-A style output port from which you may charge your phone. Finally, there’s a recessed RESET button.
Additionally, there are six lights in the button area. These lamps tell you what the speaker is doing as you work each of the buttons, as follows.
First, all the buttons have a round shape. E.g. See them with their icon pictures in the next picture. Unfortunately, it’s hard to feel the embossments on the buttons. However, the Play-Pause and Volume UP buttons have a single raised dot at the twelve o’clock position that makes it easier to orient yourself to the speaker controls when in the dark.
This button controls how the speaker sounds, as well as whether the multi-color party lights on the front of the unit are ON or OFF.
Press and release quickly the EXTRA BASS-LIGHT button. You should immediately hear the sound change to a less bassy timbre. Then, the normally lighted button goes dark. In this mode, the battery generally lasts longer per charge.
To return the XB30 to Extra Bass mode, just press and release the EXTRA BASS-LIGHT button once again. Then the button lamp lights up and this mode is active once more.
Note that this Extra Bass mode is switched ON by default.
As mentioned, this speaker has some LEDs on its front, at the left and right edges that normally glow, pulsate, brighten, and dim along with the music coming through the speaker, as we see next.
You can turn these off with the EXTRA BASS-LIGHT button by pressing and holding that control until the lamps turn off.
To turn them on again, you do the same thing, and press and hold the EXTRA BASS-LIGHT pushbutton until the lights come back on.
Note that these operate by default. So you must explicitly turn them off if you so desire.
This button causes the speaker to announce the amount of charge left in the battery in a percentage number. It also lets you answer and disconnect incoming calls. Find this control just to the right of the EXTRA BASS button and just left of the Play-Pause button. It’s the second button from the left on the buttons panel.
If you have your 30 paired with your phone, and a call comes in, you can pick it up on this speaker by quickly pressing and releasing this button once. Detail: The phone ringing sound comes through the XB30 and the program you were playing pauses.
The XB30 then turns into a speakerphone. I.e. You’ll hear callers on the speaker, and they will hear you via the built in mic. See the location of this tiny condenser microphone in the next picture. It’s in the front, near speaker top, just left of center.
Press and hold the PHONE-BATT button any time the speaker is ON, until you hear the unit speak the percentage number of battery power left to you in a female voice. Release it at that time. The voice can say one of the following…
When paired with an Apple device, you may press and hold the Phone-BATT button on the XB30 to get Siri’s attention. Note that you must first enable Siri on the source device (phone, tablet) to get her attention this way. Note though that this may not work if you pair more than one device with the speaker at the same time.
The multifunction Play / Pause button looks like a right-pointing arrow / triangle with two vertical lines to the right of that. It is the third button from the left edge of the button panel. Furthermore, it’s immediately to the right of the PHONE-BATT button, and just to the left of the ADD button. E.g. We point out with the pink arrow in the next picture. It lets you move around in playlists, get a voice assistant’s attention, and stop and start the music.
Press and release the Play-Pause button quickly to pause audio play. Rapidly press it again to reverse the pause action, and resume playback.
Note that this button is not a mute button. That is, pausing play in this way halts playback on the source Bluetooth device to which this speaker is currently paired. It does not merely cut the speaker volume while the stream continues going. If streaming an audio file, the play stops. So, you won’t miss any content when you pause the speaker, as the source device (your phone, tablet, or computer) remembers where the content was paused.
Then it picks up playback where it left off, when you press the play pause button. Note though that pausing a live stream generally results in loss of program content, just like if you walk away from a live radio broadcast. When you return, you can’t hear what you missed unless you have other equipment.
To skip ahead to the next song in the playlist you’re listening to, quickly press and release the Play-Pause button two times.
To start the currently-playing song over again, quickly press and release this button three times.
If you want to skip backward in the playlist to the start of the previous song, get to the beginning of the current song. Again, to do that, press the Play-Pause button three times. Then as soon as the song starts over, quickly press and release this button again three times.
This function lets you join from two to ten compatible speakers such that both play the same program in Wireless Party Chain (WPC) mode. The ADD button also joins two XB30s for Stereo or Double modes. It’s the fourth button from the left edge of the buttons panel, just to the right of the Play-Pause button, and just to the left of the Volume DOWN button.
Why use WPC mode? Because, as with the Connect Plus and Party Boost feature on popular JBL speakers for example, you get a wider coverage area when you have more than one speaker in sync, than when just one is playing. So you get more volume to spread around bigger party areas. So Sony designed this speaker with the same idea in mind.
Now to create a party group, you can use any combination of XB20, XB30, and XB40 models. Moreover, in WPC mode, unlike with stereo pairing, you can indeed mix and match different speaker models, so long as you do it with only the models listed here.
To form a WPC group of speakers, do as follows.
When you’re ready to completely break the party connect link, simply press and hold the ADD button on Speaker One for three seconds. A tone then sounds and the L and R lights goes out, meaning that the link is now broken, and all the other speakers in the group stop playing as well.
But if you remove one of the other speakers in the group in this way, the group remains. I.e. the speakers left in the group keep playing.
The Stereo Pairing function lets you join two XB30s such that one plays the left channel of the stereo program, while the other plays the right channel. Now to create a stereo pair, you need two SRS XB30s. Pairing the 30 with speakers other than an identical model did not work in our tests, and the Sony documentation states that you must have two of the same model in Bluetooth range of each other for connecting the two as a stereo pair to work.
When stereo mode is active, one or the other of the L and R lamps glows, depending on which channel the speaker is set up to play. On the speaker that plays the left stereo channel, the L lamp glows and the R lamp is dark. On the right speaker, the R lamp glows and L lamp is dark.
Now To form a stereo pair of two XB30 speakers, do as follows.
When in Stereo Pair mode, each speaker is assigned one of the two stereo channels (either L or R). On each speaker, one or the other of the L and R lamps lights to tell you which channel that particular speaker is playing. Now drawing on our example above, let’s say that Speaker One is playing the left channel, and Speaker Two is playing the right. In that case, the L lamp on Speaker One glows while the R lamp is dark.
Conversely on Speaker Two, the L lamp is dark while the R lamp glows.
With the ADD button, you can reverse these assignments such that Speaker One plays the right channel while Speaker Two plays the left. To do that, simply press and release the ADD button repeatedly on either speaker until the L and R lights on each speaker display the channel assignment you desire.
When you’re ready to break the stereo pairing, simply press and hold the ADD button on one of the speakers for three seconds. A tone then sounds and the L and R lights go out, indicating that the pairing is now over.
When two XB30 speaker operate in Double Mode, both speakers play a monaural version of the music. I.e. They both play the sum (L + R) of the left and right stereo channels.
To establish Double Mode, you set up the two speakers just like you did for stereo mode. Then, press and release the ADD button on one of the speakers, until the L and R lamps both light up on both speakers.
The XB 30 also offers Volume Controls. Find them in the right half of the button panel, just to the right of the ADD button, and just to the left of the Power-Pairing button. These buttons have minus and plus symbols embossed in their centers, and we point them out in the next picture. When you count buttons from the left side of the XB30, these are buttons 5 and 6.
When pressed, these lower and raise the output volume respectively, by reducing or increasing the volume setting on the paired source device. Moreover, you have roughly forty-five (45) volume level steps on this unit.
Note that you can also change speaker volume by adjusting the volume on your source BT device. Plus you can also do it from within the Sony Music Center app as well.
No other accessibility sounds play when you adjust volume on the XB 30. But the white Power lamp normally blinks once for each time you press and release these controls. This lets you know that your button press registered with the speaker. However this lamp quickly pulses several times when the speaker is at maximum volume and you press the Volume UP button to raise the sound level further. Also, the Power light does this when the speaker is already at its lowest volume, and you try to turn it down further by pressing the Volume DOWN button.
With the speaker paired and playing, press and release the Volume DOWN button to decrease its audio output level by one step. Press the Volume UP button to increase audio output. Or, you can press and hold the buttons to rapidly raise and lower the volume. The source device generally displays a moving volume control so you can see the effects of pressing these buttons.
Note that these loudness controls affect the volume level setting whether the unit is paired or not. Also, the volume setting may change from paired device to paired device. That is, each paired device remembers its own volume setting. So you might need to re set the sound output when you unpair the speaker from one source device and pair it to another.
Next we have the Power-Pairing button, at the far right edge of buttons panel. E.g. We point it out with the green arrow in the next picture. Note the round power symbol shape with the plum line passing through its top that they emboss on the button.
The first purpose for the Power-Pairing button is to power UP and DOWN the speaker. To do that, Press and release the Power button when the speaker is OFF to turn it on. Press and release it again, to turn it back OFF. The Power lamp lights up when the speaker boots, as we show in the next picture.
The speaker makes no sound when you turn it on or off. But during turn-on, it might make noises if it automatically pairs with a device. In that case, you hear a ding-dong sound, and the unit announces, “Bluetooth connected.”
So, to know for sure that this speaker is indeed OFF, you must check the Power status lamp, mentioned above. When the speaker is OFF, all lamps should be dark, unless you’re charging the unit. In that case, the CHARGE lamp still glows solid orange while the battery is still taking a charge. You could also press the Pairing button, and if the speaker is OFF, you’ll get no response.
This function is essential when you want to connect the 30 to a source device, and then stream music on that device to this speaker.
With the speaker powered ON, you press and hold in the Power / Pairing button, until you hear a rising-pitch set of beeps and the speaker says, “Bluetooth pairing.” This means that the speaker is now in pairing mode, and you may now release the button.
You must do this anytime you pair the Sony SRS XB30 with any source device that you’ve never paired with this speaker since the last hard factory reset.
When in pairing mode, the Pairing Status lamp blinks in a fast-flash pattern. And while that’s going on, the XB30 sends out its name and other connection handle info over the Bluetooth frequencies. Then, this allows nearby BT devices to find and sync to it.
When a device subsequently connects to the XB30, the pairing status lamp stops blinking, and starts glowing a steady white.
Furthermore, this button also provides a handy way for the vision impaired and blind folks to check that the speaker is OFF. If the speaker is ON and you press this button, you’ll hear a voice announcement about Bluetooth pairing. If you hear nothing, then the speaker is in all likelihood, OFF.
If the speaker locks up such that none of the buttons work, you can try pressing the RESET button, the sole button inside the ports compartment on the back of the unit.
Note that this does not perform a hard reset. Your settings remain intact and the speaker does not forget its recently paired devices list. All this appears to do is forcibly disconnect the battery from the electronics inside. Then when you release this button, power comes back and (hopefully) the speaker boots up normally again when you press the Power button.
You can reset the XB30 to factory default settings and state. To do that, turn on the speaker. Then press and hold the Power / Pairing and Volume DOWN buttons. Find these in the fifth and seventh button positions from the left. Hold them in at the same time until all lights on the unit go dark. See these buttons pointed at by the green arrows in the next picture.
You may wish to reset the speaker to fix any unexpected behaviors you notice from it such as failing to pair, sound distortion, cutting out, failing to power OFF when you press the Power button, and so on.
Note that resetting makes stale any saved connection info about this speaker on your source Bluetooth devices. So you’ll have to forget those connections on said source devices, and re pair the speaker after a reset in order to play your audio content through it from those devices once again.
As described above, you use the ADD and Volume UP buttons together to create a Wireless Party Chain (WPC) speaker group. See that section for more details.
Th speaker by default automatically shuts itself OFF after fifteen (15) minutes of inactivity. Inactivity means no button presses on the unit, and no audio coming from the paired device. This feature conserves battery power. Thus this feature does not work when speaker is running on external power. You only get this capability when powering it from the internal battery.
To switch this setting OFF or ON, you must first connect the speaker to external power. Plus, the speaker must be powered OFF to make this change. The speaker is OFF when all lights except for possibly the CHARGE lamp are dark.
Hold them in at the same time for approximately five (5) seconds, until the Pairing light flashes three (3) times.
Hold them in at the same time for approximately five (5) seconds, until the Bluetooth light flashes two (2) times.
Note that you can control many of these XB30 functions from your phone or tablet, instead of using the buttons on the speaker directly. For that, you need the Sony Music Center app. In that app, you can adjust speaker volume, turn it off, update its firmware, use a simple audio equalizer to tailor its sound to your individual tastes, and other actions. But how to use that app is beyond the scope of this post, though if enough of you want that information, we may develop a piece that describes that later.
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