
Klipsch Nashville
Score: 93/100
Beats Pill - Portable Bluetooth Speaker - Up to 24H Battery
Score: 88/100
$99.95
Rankings

The Klipsch Nashville is a rugged, IP67-rated Bluetooth speaker with 24 h battery life, 360° sound and an in-app EQ, but it is limited to mono output and only SBC codec support.

The 2024 Beats Pill delivers premium-grade sound, strong bass and a full day of playback in a compact, IP67-rated body, with USB-C high-resolution audio and reverse charging. Its lack of EQ customization and limited multi-speaker support keep it from being a party-centric device.
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
24 hoursbest | 24 hoursbest | |
20 wattsbest | — | |
| ↓ lower better | 60 Hzbest | — |
20,000 Hzbest | — | |
| ↓ lower better | 1.5 hoursbest | — |
57.15 mmbest | — | |
| ↓ lower better | 970 g | 680 gbest |
1 metersbest | — |
Click an attribute name to sort · Green = best, red = worst (relative to this comparison)
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
Build & Design(1) | ||
Weight (g) | 970 g | 680 g |

Products in the top-left offer the best value (high score, low price).

Professional reviewers praise the Nashville for its robust IP67 construction, impressive 24-hour battery and flexible app-based EQ, while criticizing the lack of higher-quality Bluetooth codecs, mono output, and unintuitive physical controls.
Everyday users highlight clear, balanced sound and exceptional battery endurance, valuing the ruggedness and 360° coverage, but complain about missing AAC/LDAC codecs, lack of track-skip buttons, and occasional rattling.

“The bass is surprisingly deep for such a small speaker.”

“Battery lasts forever - used it all day at a beach party.”

“Love the USB-C charging - charged my phone when it died.”




Reviewers award it four out of five stars, praising detailed layered sound, strong bass, long battery and ecosystem integration, while noting the missing EQ app and small buttons.
Everyday users highlight deep bass, all-day battery, USB-C reverse charging and premium feel, but mention tiny hard-to-press buttons and the absence of a charger.