Close

Member Login

Invalid username or password.
Incorrect Login. Please try again.

Not a member?

Sign up and join a community that's passionate about exploring the world of entertainment & technology.

Budget Bars: Soundbars from Vizio, Samsung, LG, and Harman Kardon

Comments

Write a comment
default_avatar.png

Thank you for finally doing a review on some sound bars. I am moving into a house finally. I have been given the basement to do whatever with, but the living room needs to be clean. I immediately start looking into everything out there, which is daunting.

I had almost settled between the Harman or the YSP-2200 and then realized that my room acoustics were going to be pretty poor with the location of the television. That is when I decided I just wanted something that would sound decent for music and boost television listening levels. That is where the Vizio comes into play.

I am a big Vizio fan due to the bang for the buck I have gotten with their TVs. I had heard recommendations of this sound bar but nothing comparing it to several others like you have done here.

One question I have, is there any thoughts on reviewing the sound bars from Polk?

default_avatar.png

So, which one is "left standing" ??

picture-20-1333557679

@sofast1 — it was a close one, since they all have their strengths, but the Vizio provided the most bang for the buck, and gets our Certified+Recommended stamp (see the second page of this piece)

default_avatar.png

Thanks, I was looking for the "winner" and skimmed to the end. Sadly, most readers will miss the most important part; " As with all soundbars, the fidelity isn’t as good as what you’d get from a decent pair of bookshelf speakers". Compare any of these to something like the Energy Take 5. Convenience is now more important than performance. Bummer.

default_avatar.png

Nice article. I wish I had seen it before I bought the LG soundbar. The 3D processing sometimes sounds "thin" to me. Are the frequency response graphs included in the article measured in stereo mode or in 3D mode? Were you 1 meter away?

picture-26-1323704608

@nyquist: All measurements were done in stereo mode, with any surround virtualizers deactivated. Because virtualizers take advantage of head-related transfer function (HRTF), the response of the signals is designed to sum inside your head with contributions from both ears, not at the capsule of a single measurement mic. So if you measure them with a mic, you get a lot of frequency response anomalies that you don't hear.

All measurements were done at 2 meters, because the bars are long and I wanted to capture the diffraction effects of the entire bar. CEA-2010 figures were scaled up +6 dB to provide the equivalent of 1-meter measurements.

picture-26-1323704608

Full details on the measurements, plus full CEA-2010 numbers, have been added.

default_avatar.png

Got an email from an engineer at LG that they've fixed the stereo-swapping problem. So that shouldn't be an issue.

Post a Comment
(1500 Characters or less)
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
By submitting this form, you accept the Mollom privacy policy.
All submitted comments are subject to the license terms set forth in our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use