EJEAS Q8 Mesh Motorcycle Helmet Headset (Waterproof Bluetooth Intercom, up to 6 riders)
Product description
If you ride in a group, the annoying bit is rarely finding people—it’s keeping everyone connected smoothly while you’re actually moving. The EJEAS Q8 Mesh is built around a mesh intercom concept with Bluetooth support, aiming to let multiple riders communicate at the same time.
It’s not trying to be a premium, “set-and-forget” headset with every feature under the sun, but on paper it ticks several boxes that matter for day-to-day riding: group talk for up to 6, a weatherproof rating, and a battery that’s designed for longer stints between charges.
Key takeaways
The standout idea here is the mesh-based group intercom. Instead of relying purely on standard Bluetooth pairing logic, the Q8 uses a mesh system with a stated intercom distance of up to 1000m (barrier-free), and it’s designed so the group shouldn’t drop when one rider leaves and comes back within range.
It also adds practical audio control: microphone mute and 5 microphone sensitivity levels, which is meant to keep comms clearer at different riding speeds. And if you’re the type who likes music or FM while chatting, the dual Bluetooth chips are included so you can listen to audio while still using intercom.

What it’s for and who it suits
This headset makes sense if you regularly ride with a small group and want a communication system that supports simultaneous group talk (stated up to 2–6 people). The mesh approach is particularly relevant if you’ve ever been frustrated by connections that weaken around traffic, tunnels, or hills—at least, that’s the direction the Q8 is marketed towards.
It also suits riders who care about day-to-day usability. Microphone sensitivity adjustments and a mute function are the kind of features that reduce “did you hear me?” moments and save battery according to the product’s description.
A realistic use case: you’re cruising on a motorway approach, then you hit slower roads, being able to shift microphone sensitivity levels can help keep your group message understandable without having to constantly shout. When you stop for fuel, leaving the group briefly shouldn’t instantly ruin the whole setup if the rider returns within the effective range.


Where it shines (and what you may notice)

The Q8’s mesh connectivity is positioned as the core strength—“stable connection” and “not easy to disconnect” are the phrases used, including a group behaviour note: the group intercom won’t be disconnected because one partner departs.
The waterproof angle also matters more than people think. With an IP67 waterproof rating mentioned, you’re not solely relying on dry, calm weather for the headset to be workable. This is the sort of rating that can make a difference if your riding includes rain, spray, or unpredictable UK weather.
Battery life is another practical point. The stated numbers include up to 230 hours of standby and up to 29 hours of music time, with intercom time specified separately (also broken down by mesh vs Bluetooth time figures). Even if your actual real-world usage will vary, the headline figures suggest it’s intended for multi-day riding rather than “charge every night”.
Limitations and what to double-check before buying
A couple of things to keep in mind, because this is where many riders get disappointed if they assume too much.

First, distance is described differently depending on conditions: up to 1000m barrier-free, but generally 400–800m in areas with heavy traffic, tunnels and hills (and Bluetooth-only figures are mentioned too). So if your routes are very environment-dependent, don’t expect the best-case distance to hold everywhere.
Second, the product description mentions communication for 2–6 people and group stability, but it doesn’t spell out whether every rider needs the same headset model or how pairing is handled in complex group scenarios. If you already own other intercom systems, it’s worth checking compatibility expectations before committing.
Tech summary


Here are the specific technical-led points mentioned in the description that matter for buying decisions:
- Type: Mesh + Bluetooth motorcycle intercom headset
- Waterproof rating: IP67
- Intercom capacity: supports up to 2–6 riders simultaneously (as stated)
- Intercom distance: up to 1000m barrier-free, otherwise generally 400–800m in heavy traffic/tunnels/hills (Bluetooth 50–150m is also referenced)
- Microphone controls: microphone mute and 5 levels of microphone sensitivity adjustment
- Battery and charging: built-in 1200mAh battery, Type-C 3-in-1 interface (audio/data/charging/firmware upgrade)
- Battery figures (as stated): up to 230 hours standby, up to 29 hours music, intercom time listed with mesh and Bluetooth breakdown
- Music sharing: upgraded music sharing function, plus dual Bluetooth chips for music or FM while talking

When it makes sense
Worth considering if you ride with a group (up to 6 riders, based on the product’s stated capacity), want stable mesh-based group communication, and you care about rain resistance with IP67.
When it may not be a great match
You may want to skip it if your riding is mostly solo or you don’t need group intercom. Also, if your main concern is guaranteed long-range performance in the exact kind of terrain you ride every day, note that the description itself flags distance changes with conditions.
Buying verdict

It’s a sensible pick for group riders who want a mesh-led intercom approach, backed up with waterproof IP67 and useful microphone controls. The Q8 feels more “built for real riding” than “just basic hands-free”, especially with the option to mute/adjust mic sensitivity and keep audio running during intercom.
That said, it’s not a promise that you’ll get the best-case distance in every environment, and some compatibility questions may still come down to how your existing setup is planned. If you’re buying for group communication and you understand that range will vary, it should fit your needs better than a purely simple, short-range Bluetooth-only approach.


Mini FAQ
Does the Q8 support group calls with several riders?
Yes—according to the product description it’s designed to allow 2–6 people to talk at the same time.

How waterproof is it?
The description states an IP67 waterproof rating.
Can I listen to music while using the intercom?
The Q8 uses dual Bluetooth chips, and the description also mentions listening to music or FM while talking, plus music sharing.
How does microphone mute and sensitivity work?
It includes microphone mute and 5 microphone sensitivity levels intended to help keep communication stable at different riding speeds.
What charging connection does it use?
The description says it uses a Type-C interface with a 3-in-1 function for audio, data transmission, charging, and firmware upgrade.
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