
Bluetooth is a short-range wireless communication protocol, widely used in mobile, industrial, and embedded devices for data exchange with low power consumption. Its presence is critical in IoT, automation, medical devices, wearables, and automotive applications, requiring rigorous testing of connectivity, performance, and compliance.
Main Bluetooth Versions and Profiles
The technology has evolved to meet different needs and applications. See below the comparison between the main versions:
📶 Comparative Table of Bluetooth Types and Standards
Version | Type | Frequency | Typical Range | Max Speed | Common Applications |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR | Classic (BR/EDR) | 2.4 GHz | ~10 m | up to 3 Mbps | Headphones, stereo audio, PC peripherals |
Bluetooth 3.0 + HS | Classic with High Speed | 2.4 GHz + Wi-Fi | ~10 m | up to 24 Mbps (via Wi-Fi) | Fast file transfer |
Bluetooth 4.0 | Low Energy (BLE) | 2.4 GHz | 10 to 50 m | up to 1 Mbps | Sensors, IoT, watches, trackers |
Bluetooth 4.2 | Enhanced BLE | 2.4 GHz | up to 100 m | up to 1 Mbps | Medical devices, home automation |
Bluetooth 5.0 | Advanced BLE | 2.4 GHz | up to 240 m (long range mode) | up to 2 Mbps | Industrial IoT, beaconing, wearables |
Bluetooth 5.1 | BLE + location | 2.4 GHz | ~200 m | up to 2 Mbps | Indoor positioning, asset tracking |
Bluetooth 5.2 | BLE + LE Audio (Isochronous Channels) | 2.4 GHz | ~200 m | up to 2 Mbps | Next-gen wireless audio, hearing devices |
Bluetooth 5.3 | Optimized BLE | 2.4 GHz | ~200 m | up to 2 Mbps | Energy-efficient IoT and lower latency |
What is the difference between Bluetooth and Wi-Fi?
Although both operate in the 2.4 GHz band and are used for wireless communication, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi have very different purposes, architectures, and behaviors.
Feature | Bluetooth | Wi-Fi |
---|---|---|
Main purpose | Short-range point-to-point communication | High-speed network and internet access |
Power consumption | Very low (ideal for battery-powered devices) | High (compared to BLE) |
Data speed | Up to 2 Mbps (BLE) or 3 Mbps (BR/EDR) | From 54 Mbps (802.11g) to over 1 Gbps (Wi-Fi 6) |
Typical range | 10 to 200 meters (depending on version) | 50 to 300 meters (varies with standard and environment) |
Network topology | Point-to-point or star (master/slave or central/peripheral) | Infrastructure (with router/AP) or ad-hoc |
Latency | Low for simple commands | Medium to high, ideal for heavy traffic |
Pairing | Requires logical pairing | Connection via SSID and network authentication |
Common applications | IoT, wearables, sensors, wireless audio | Home internet, streaming, cloud, local networks |
Technical summary:
- Use Bluetooth when you need low consumption, direct device-to-device communication, and simplicity of integration (e.g., IoT sensors, headphones, watches).
- Use Wi-Fi when the priority is high data rate, internet connection, or high-performance local network communication.
What should be tested in a module or product with Bluetooth?
When testing a device with integrated Bluetooth, critical points include:
- RF testing: transmission power (TX), reception sensitivity (RX), frequency stability, BER, EVM
- Functional testing: pairing, data exchange, beacon detection, reconnection
- Interoperability testing: with smartphones, gateways, headsets, etc.
- Power consumption testing: especially in battery-powered devices
- Regulatory compliance: CE, FCC, Anatel, Bluetooth SIG (qualification listing)
How AJOLLY Testing performs Bluetooth testing
AJOLLY Testing designs complete solutions for Bluetooth device validation, combining RF instrumentation, test automation, and physical and digital interfaces:
- Specialized instruments: LitePoint, Rohde & Schwarz, Anritsu, Keysight, supporting BLE and classic BT
- Integration with test software (LabVIEW, TestStand, C#) for sequencing, logs and reports
- Bluetooth host simulation for pairing tests, packet exchange, detection, and disconnection
- Current monitoring for consumption analysis at each stage (standby, scan, TX, RX)
- HCI logs and BLE traffic analysis for fault and performance diagnostics
Application Example
- Production line testing: BLE module for IoT sensor automatically validated on the bench
- Firmware validation: wearable device tested for GATT profile and reconnection
- RF testing: measurement of transmitted power and signal quality with vector analyzer
- Consumption analysis: comparison of consumption profiles according to connection state
Benefits of a Complete Bluetooth Test
- Reduction of connectivity failures in the field
- Faster certification by being technically compliant from development
- Greater reliability perceived by the end customer
- Better productive yield with fast and automatic tests
- Ease of traceability and reproducibility in series tests