

🎿 Elevate your ride with sound that shreds as hard as you do!
Wildhorn Outfitters Alta Wireless Bluetooth Helmet Headphones deliver premium 40mm HD sound with deep bass, powered by Bluetooth 5.0 for stable wireless connectivity. Designed for winter sports pros, they feature glove-friendly controls, hands-free voice commands, and universal compatibility with most ski and snowboard helmets. Rugged, sweat-resistant, and tested in extreme cold, the Alta offers 10 hours of uninterrupted playtime to keep you energized on the slopes all day long.









| ASIN | B07H7X814B |
| Age range (description) | Adult |
| Cable feature | Wireless |
| Charging time | 10 Hours |
| Compatible devices | Ski/Snowboard Helmets |
| Connectivity technology | Bluetooth |
| Control method | Touch |
| Control type | Media Control, Volume Control |
| Headphone jack | 3.5 mm Jack |
| Included components | User Manual, Mic, 3 Button Controls |
| Item model number | Alta |
| Manufacturer | WildHorn Outfitters |
| Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS) |
| Model name | Alta |
| Number of Items | 2 |
| Package type | Rigid |
| Product Dimensions | 4.57 x 1.27 x 5.59 cm; 100 g |
| Recommended uses for product | Snowboarding, Skiing |
| Specific uses for product | Skiing or Snowboarding |
| Style | Sporty |
| Water resistance level | Water Resistant |
| Wireless communication technologies | Bluetooth |
M**I
El producto es sí tiene buen aspecto y la bolsa de transporte es un detalle útil....pero: 1. La potencia de los altavoces es insuficiente para un volumen “de confort” siendo externos al oído y normalmente tapados por una tela en las orejeras del casco donde se alojan. 2. La calidad del sonido deja mucho que desear. Hay una gran ausencia de bajos; siquiera con el ecualizador de Spotify, por ejemplo, se consigue que el sonido deje de estar tan descompensado con las frecuencias más altas (medios y agudos). 3. Supongo que dependerá de cada caso, pero en mi Casco de Snowboard (OAKLEY MOD5 Mips) son incómodos: los altavoces se dejan ubicar bien en las orejeras y el cable tiene la suficiente longitud, pero cuando te pones el casco, las orejas quedan presionadas y las orejeras quedan como abiertas hacia afuera como consecuencia del espesor de los altavoces, que no es mucho, pero lo suficientemente para ser incomodo cuando te pones el casco.
J**T
In the 2024-25 season, I tried out - side by side - the Wildhorn Altas, Smith x Aleck Nunchucks, and Outdoor Tech Chips 3.0. I used them in my winter helmet to listen to music via bluetooth. Overall - I liked the Altas the best, based primarily on sound, but also with regard to ease of use, and price (far cheaper than the other two). The Chips sounded almost as good, but the controls are not as easy/useful to me as the Altas. The Nunchucks sounded very distorted, the app would not pair properly, and the buttons were hard to control. Buttons - Alta has 3 buttons, making volume, track changes, voice commands, and calling easy and intuitive (and similar to most other bluetooth headphones). It's easy to locate and operate each with gloves on. Nunchucks are two buttons and are less intuitive (requiring some memorization), for example, to change volume, you hold a button, and the volume cycles higher and higher, until looping around to lowest setting and stepping upwards again. Also, some two handed gestures are required (tougher when holding ski gear), and buttons are a bit harder to find and operate with gloves. The Chips are similar to the Nunchucks, and you'll need to memorize some key combos to use them (one click to lower volume, two to raise volume). Sound - I tested the units side by side (one brand on each ear) The Altas have nice bass and clarity (though they're slightly lacking in high end). The Chips were similar but not quite as good: the sound on the Altas is slightly more assertive and full. The Nunchucks have more high end treble and somewhat less bass, but the mid and upper ranges are significantly distorted and compressed. Sound quality is subjective, but I honestly don't understand how any reviewers can enjoy the sound of the Nunchucks… the harsh, distorted midrange gets tedious quickly. None of the headphones has hifi sound, but the Altas are pleasant and on-par with most good sounding sub-$100 bluetooth headsets that I've owned. Volume on all models is fine, though Nunchucks sound distorted at any volume. Features - The Altas were up and running in seconds with simple bluetooth pairing. The features all worked fine - voice command, volume, pause, track change, calls (no intercom included). The Chips were easy to pair as well.The Nunchucks require an app, and after 20 minutes of trying, I could not get the headphones to pair with the app, because the required firmware update consistently failed. I did get the Nunchucks paired via my phone's regular pairing, but without the app, you lose intercom, equilization, and all other advanced features, making the headphone features equivalent to the more rudimentary Altas. Other - My only gripe with the Altas (other than lack of intercom) is the micro-usb port (rather than usb-c). An added bonus to the Altas is simple packaging (a pouch in a baggie), compared to the elaborate cardboard packaging of the others, which gets immediately thrown in the trash. Each of the models fit well into my large helmet, though the wire on the Chips was slightly short. I hope this info helps… isn't it sad that even "professional" reviews just regurgitate the feature lists of these items, and don't seem to do real, hands-on, side by side comparisons anymore?
H**G
Es muy ancho y no cabe en los cascos
G**G
Good sound, long lasting battery, louder then I was expecting talking on the phone thru them works well
A**I
I went to Davos for skiing last week and I am SOOOO glad I got these headphones instead of other more expensive brands. Having used these in pretty extreme skiing conditions, these did not let me down for a second. They fit into any ski helmet with audio-compatible ear pads (I tried them in a few), including my Atomic one. The sound quality is pretty damn good. Those reviewers who complain about "not enough bass", I would say you need to place them correctly in the helmet! Also, you're using these for skiing, not in a recording studio! If you want very deep bass, I suggest you buy a ghetto blaster and carry it on your back rather than go skiing! In any case, my skiing playlists include classical, death/black metal, EDM and rock, and they all sounded pretty good to me. (And yes, I know what great sounds like - I use mixing and recoding quality headphones at home.) The charging is quick (I think around an hour from flat) and gives around 10 hours of use. The bluetooth connection is 100% solid. I had these connected to my Apple Watch music app, and my watch was buried underneath my ski gloves, ski jacket and thermal layers, and not once did I lose connection for a second! This is probably the best thing I like about these headphones; they are super reliable. And the large buttons are amazing. I could stop, play, skip backwards/forwards and adjust volume without taking my gloves off. I am not sure if the manufacturer claims these are water-resistant/-proof, but from my experience, they can handle wet conditions pretty well - I used them in my woollen hat instead of my helmet one day, and it was a horrible non-stop-snow-and-wind day, and these headphones couldn't care less! The manufacturers of these headphone make a point of saying these have been designed/tested by people who actually ski. After using these last week, I believe them! I cannot fault these one bit. If you ski, forget all other headphones. Get these!
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
1 week ago