Mophie's Juice Pack Pro couples a battery with serious rugged protection

17.08.2012
Mophie's $130 is a rugged battery case that fits the iPhone 4 and 4S. The case combines a 2500 milliamp hour battery case with a rubberized, water-tight shell. In effect, the Pro gloms the venerable, Eddy-award winning ( Macworld rated 4.5 out of 5 mice ) onto a rugged case that Mophie claims is resistant to vibration and chock, splashing and rain, sand and dust, and impact and drops.

The Juice Pack Pro ships sealed up, and I'll admit that it took a bit of elbow grease and pain to open it up the first time. Sliding your phone in and out of a Juice Pack Plus or Air is simple; taking the Pro on and off requires more effort. You need to peel the rubber off the chassis, and then snap the plastic pieces apart--it's not exactly hard work, but it takes a minute. That's good for protecting your phone, but it's not so good if you do intend to remove the case frequently.

To do what it does, the Juice Pack Pro is, by necessity, big, heavy, and thick. The case adds a full pound to your iPhone's weight, and it measures 5.26 inches tall, 2.78 inches wide, and 1.02 inches thick. The Pro feels big, both in my pocket and in my hand.

The case consists of three separate parts: a 2500 milliamp hour battery, a screen protector, and a rubber outer layer. With the case fully assembled, you can still access everything (except the dock connector port, which is used by the battery), though it may take some effort: The Ring/Silent switch is blocked by a protective rubber flap, as is the headphone jack and upper microphone. Accessing that Ring/Silent switch is a bit of a challenge, because the case's thickness, coupled with the cutout's relatively narrow opening, necessitates some seriously precise finger gymnastics, but it's manageable. Press-through rubber overlays cover the Sleep/Wake button, Home button, and volume buttons, and there are covered cutouts for both cameras.

Using a Juice Pack Pro-clad iPhone is mostly fine. The screen protector passes through touches easily enough, though it certainly gets dirtier faster than the glass screen would unprotected. I did find that the screen is harder to see in bright sunlight with the case on than it would be otherwise.

At the bottom of the case, two flaps sit on the left and right edges. The one on the left covers a small power button that toggles the battery on and off; the one on the right hides a Micro-USB port for charging. The Juice Pack Pro ships with a Micro-USB to USB cable for charging; you can plug it into your Mac or smartphone adapter.