More Speakers (Article 16 of 157)

JVC SXXSW6000 5.1 Surround System (Only $50)

Test Report: When we saw JVC's SXXSW6000 on WalMart.com, we just had to know: What does a $49.88-priced, 5.1 speaker system sound like?
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JVC SXXSW6000 5.1 Surround System (Only $50)

Tools

Test Bench

Frequency response
satellite 145 Hz to 20 kHz ±7.5 dB
subwoofer 51 Hz to 220 Hz ±3 dB

Sensitivity (SPL at 1 meter with 2.8 volts of pink-noise input)
satellite 82 dB
subwoofer N/A
Impedance (minimum/nominal)
satellite 5.8/6.5
subwoofer N/A

Bass limits (lowest frequency and maximum SPL with limit of 10% distortion at 2 meters in a large room)
subwoofer 56 Hz at 85 dB, 93 dB average SPL from 56 to 125 Hz, 99 dB maximum SPL at 100 Hz, bandwidth uniformity 88%

The frequency-response curve of the satellite speaker is weighted to reflect how sound arrives at a listener's ears with normal speaker placement. Measurements of the satellite were made on a 6-foot stand at 1 meter, while the subwoofer's woofer and port were close-miked and their response summed.

Frequency response of the satellite is uneven, as it usually is for single-driver speakers. From the lowest range of the satellite's bandwidth, the response rises by several decibels up to a peak at 2.8 kHz, followed by a sharp dip centered at 5.7 kHz. The broad peak at 2.8 kHz — and the resulting lack of lower midrange response — are the cause of the satellite's perceived thin sound. The good news is that the satellites are fairly well-matched, varying by at most 1.5 dB and within 1 dB of each other at most frequencies.

Within the subwoofer's operating range, its response is impressively even, measuring effectively flat from 51 to 220 Hz. The range is limited, though — below about 56 Hz, distortion rises dramatically. Maximum output of 99 dB at 100 Hz is good for a sub of this size. Interestingly, and wisely, JVC has limited the gain of the 100-watt amplifier in the subwoofer. At many frequencies, we simply couldn't turn the sub up enough (or raise the level of the incoming test signal enough) to get to 10% distortion. In fact, at the peak output frequency, it was impossible to push the distortion past 1.8%.

The impedance of the satellite speakers runs a bit low for a system intended for use with inexpensive electronics. Furthermore, the very low sensitivity of 82 dB demands a great deal of amplifier power — more than four times what a typical speaker might need. This low sensitivity, coupled with the limited power handling of the satellites, makes it impossible to achieve high levels with this system.


TEST BENCH


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