Rod,
Agree with your methodology, but assembling the group and the equipment for 4 or more people and checking the firmware etc. is nearly impossible to do with an ad hoc group, at least for me. Is there anyone on here who could do this? Most likely it would be Don Moe/Jim Park in FL- they are the only people in MSTA I know who have ridden with 4 or more 30K and 20S users. How about it, guys?
OTOH, why should all this testing even be necessary? BT intercoms should be like appliances- you buy them, plug them in, use them, and they work. They have matured nearly to that point providing you JUST want to listen to music, JUST use your phone or JUST have intercom with yourself and one or two other people.
You should be able to follow the instructions in the user manual and configure a system that works. Period. Unfortunately, the more things you want to do, and especially the more things you want to do simultaneously, the more difficult it gets. Suddenly there are many ways to configure this stuff that don't work and only a few (if any) that do. Throw in the limitations and complexities of the hardware, BT medium itself and add some firmware bugs. Now you have an unstable system that is extremely difficult to test and evaluate.
In addition we have quirks. For users who can't figure them out, they look like failures. For example, for the first year or two my 20S had to be powered up before the A2DP audio dongle I use with it, otherwise it wouldn't connect. After one of the firmware updates, the order flipped- now the dongle has to be turned on first. With good software design, it wouldn't make any difference which one was turned on first. BTW, am not ragging on the 20S- it's far better than anything that preceded it. All the other brands of BT intercoms have quirks too.
BTW, Jeff Dolence and I are getting our 30K units replaced, as we cannot duplicate the success with mesh intercom and other audio sources that Richard Battles and Jim Park are claiming. We'll see what happens...
Norm Kern