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Donka

macrumors 68030
Original poster
May 3, 2011
2,842
1,439
Scotland
With the recent announcement of the Apple Pencil, now is a great time to discuss styli and the Jot Dash is the latest from Adonit. This forgoes some of the higher end features such as Bluetooth support for palm rejection and pressure sensitivity to bring a capable stylus at a respectable price point. Included in the package is the stylus and USB charge dock - there is no true documentation included but it really isn't required. For those who must read up on every last detail though, there is good information available on the Adonit support pages.

The Jot Dash is a classy looking device, fashioned from Aluminium and coming in either a silver or black finish. It measures in at 141 x 8.5mm and weighs 12g. It features a simple click power button on top and a handy shirt clip on the side. Further down from this clip is the power indicator which briefly lights up in green when powered on, and red when powered down. Whilst charging, the indicator will pulse red and turn to solid green when fully charged. There is also power saving at work and the stylus will power down after 15 minutes of inactivity.

Included in the package is the USB charger which is a small but clever design allowing the stylus to sit magnetically in place whilst charging. This magnetic hold benefits with the safety net of easily disengaging when the user needs or when knocked to ensure neither the stylus nor charger are damaged. The charger is small, only protruding 25mm and lightweight thanks to its plastic construction although I would be wary when carrying this around as it could easily be lost. Thankfully, Adonit do offer additional or replacement chargers on their site.

The whole reason for this stylus requiring an internal power source is that it generates a small electrical charge around a very small tip that replicates a fingertip interacting with a capacitive touch screen. This composite polymer plastic tip measures just 1.9mm across which is the main benefit of this type of active stylus - it offers up a higher level of precision over a fingertip to the user because they can see exactly where they are interacting with the screen. The tip is smooth and very hard wearing, designed to glide effortlessly across the screen while being durable to last the course of ownership. This stylus should work with pretty much all capacitive touch screens including iOS and Android devices.

The whole purpose of this stylus is to replicate what you would do with your finger without the need for an additional Bluetooth connection. This means that there is no additional requirements and this should work just as well with any touch based application. If it works with your finger, it will work with the Jot Dash.

The Jot Dash takes around 45 minutes for a full charge and lasts for around 14 hours of continuous use. This is great battery life for such a small stylus and it's great that there have been no compromises in the design to achieve that battery life. It is sized just like a normal pen and feels great in use. If you are going to be taking a lot of notes with a stylus, you want it to be comfortable to hold and work with and this definitely ticks that box!

Performance of the Jot Dash during my testing was every bit as good as using a finger. On the iPad, the screen responds the exact same way with perhaps the only small deviation being drawing slow, diagonal lines where a small stepping pattern appears in the line. This is down to the way a capacitive screen uses a matrix to detect contact and is essentially calibrated for a fingertip. This is a product of the screen technology employed and not a failing of the stylus itself. There is also some detectable lag which manifests itself in the line on screen being drawn behind the tip. Again, this is down to the screen technology and is exactly the same when a finger is used; it is just more apparent with a fine stylus tip because your fingertip largely obscures this on screen delay.

The lack of official palm rejection and pressure sensitivity may be seen as a limiting factor in some usage scenarios but this can be a non-issue when used with the right application. I tested this with Notability, Notes Plus and One Note on the iPad and all of these apps do a very respectable job of automated palm rejection, to the point where I could relax my hand on the screen and take notes and only the stylus input was captured.

When it comes to art applications, you are still limited to manually selecting different brush widths due to the lack of pressure sensitivity but the stylus still offers the precision a fine tip provides in place of a fingertip. This means the Jot Dash is still a viable option for such apps although perhaps not the optimum choice if you are serious with your creativity.

The design and functionality of the Jot Dash combined with the sensible price point make this a very good active stylus indeed. Although it works fine with any application, used in conjunction with certain note taking apps makes the lack of palm rejection a non-issue. A stylus on a glass screen is never going to replicate the feel of pen on paper but if you take notes with your finger or a capacitive rubber tipped stylus and are looking for the next step up, it is really hard to fault this stylus from Adonit. Perhaps the only flaw with the design is the tapping sound of hard tip on glass. This may not be so much of an issue in a noisy environment or when you are on your own but may prove a little distracting in a quiet meeting room with others around you. That is a the trade off with a hard wearing, smooth flowing tip on a glass screen and one I'm sure, many will be willing to make.

Video review:
 

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mrex

macrumors 68040
Jul 16, 2014
3,458
1,527
europe
But why aluminium always? Surely it feels great(?) on your hand, but surely you also need to be more carefully when using it on the screen. I love my Pencil53, a wood pencil and i dont need to worry when using it, lay it on the screen or sometimes drop it on the screen.

An interesting fine point stylus though... Great review!
 

Donka

macrumors 68030
Original poster
May 3, 2011
2,842
1,439
Scotland
But why aluminium always? Surely it feels great(?) on your hand, but surely you also need to be more carefully when using it on the screen. I love my Pencil53, a wood pencil and i dont need to worry when using it, lay it on the screen or sometimes drop it on the screen.

An interesting fine point stylus though... Great review!

Thanks. The Aluminium seems a fine choice as the barrel is smooth although if you are in the habit of leaving the stylus on the screen, the likes of the shirt clip may be a concern but I don't in reality it would pose an issue. I think I would be inclined to use it in conjunction with a screen protector though for peace of mind.
 

Donka

macrumors 68030
Original poster
May 3, 2011
2,842
1,439
Scotland
I later tested it with an Air 2 and Mini 4 and it performs exactly the same as best I could tell.
 
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Donka

macrumors 68030
Original poster
May 3, 2011
2,842
1,439
Scotland
Np. I can create a quick video of this with the Air 2 if anyone wants to see the performance.
 

Lisat78

macrumors regular
Jun 5, 2015
102
55
I'm getting the Air 2 this week and will be looking for a fine tip stylus so definitely interested in seeing a video!
 

Donka

macrumors 68030
Original poster
May 3, 2011
2,842
1,439
Scotland
Anything specific you would like to see in the video or just general usage?
 

Lisat78

macrumors regular
Jun 5, 2015
102
55
General usage, I think. How fluidly it writes would be important—sketching too, if possible, given the issues with the Air 2 and styli. It would also be great if you could find a way to make any commentary accessible; I'm deaf and following commentaries on review videos doesn't really happen!
 

Donka

macrumors 68030
Original poster
May 3, 2011
2,842
1,439
Scotland
Sure. I will just be a quick video comparing against the video review above but I'll call out any issues or observations in the thread.
 

mrex

macrumors 68040
Jul 16, 2014
3,458
1,527
europe
Anything specific you would like to see in the video or just general usage?

- Skipping?
- Offset?
- Wavy lines (drawing a straight line in a 45 degree angle)?
- Drawing a ball (slowly)
- Handwriting generally
 
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GerritV

macrumors 68020
May 11, 2012
2,143
2,471
Great review, I enjoyed it a lot (yes, I too am a stylus junkie).
Thanks for sharing this !
But I will never ever buy a noisy tip stylus, no way I'm going to annoy the people working next to me.
Which is the main reason why I went with the Lynktec Rechargable Apex, nice and quiet.
 

Lisat78

macrumors regular
Jun 5, 2015
102
55
That's a great review, thanks! May end up ordering the Dash now. I wasn't sure because the reviews are very 50/50 about it, but it looks like it will be fine for my needs.
 
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heretiq

Contributor
Jan 31, 2014
797
1,255
Denver, CO
Thank you Donka for this excellent review -- especially the iPad Air 2 addendum.

I use the Jot Dash Pro and love it but the clear disc is still a bit hokey for me. Can you comment on how the Jot Dash compares to the Jot Pro in terms of offset/accuracy, lag and noise? I would love to get the Jot Dash, but only if it is as good or better than the Jot Pro.

Thoughts?
 

Cptnodegard

macrumors 6502
Jan 17, 2013
393
34
If you're making another video, I'd love to see one with smaller writing, focusing on whether there is an offset, from different angles etc. That's generally where adonit products fail badly.
 

mrex

macrumors 68040
Jul 16, 2014
3,458
1,527
europe
also much slower moves... that has been the problem with air2. when you draw slow, it starts to draw wavy lines... but thanks, great vids! we are just too demanding :D
 

Donka

macrumors 68030
Original poster
May 3, 2011
2,842
1,439
Scotland
Hi All.
This is my first Adonit so I'm unable to compare against other models in their range.
I'll try and find some time to explore the other requests but I certainly have no complaints from a regular note taking perspective on the Air 2.
 

sracer

macrumors G4
Apr 9, 2010
10,309
13,076
where hip is spoken
Hi All.
This is my first Adonit so I'm unable to compare against other models in their range.
I'll try and find some time to explore the other requests but I certainly have no complaints from a regular note taking perspective on the Air 2.
This reviewer shows some limitations of the Jot Dash that have me rethinking it. (I already have the Adonit Jot which works quite well)

 

Cptnodegard

macrumors 6502
Jan 17, 2013
393
34
Got mine today. It essentially works exactly like a Jot Touch Pixelpoint that's not connected, which means it has an offset in portrait mode, but works ok in landscape mode. It's definitely not a flawless product, but considering the price, size, and the fact that connecting an Adonit stylus makes it worse IMHO, it's ok.
 

sracer

macrumors G4
Apr 9, 2010
10,309
13,076
where hip is spoken
Got mine today. It essentially works exactly like a Jot Touch Pixelpoint that's not connected, which means it has an offset in portrait mode, but works ok in landscape mode. It's definitely not a flawless product, but considering the price, size, and the fact that connecting an Adonit stylus makes it worse IMHO, it's ok.
How well does it draw diagonal lines? I was quite surprised to see various review videos that show wiggly lines when drawing diagonals.
 
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