SPECIFICATIONS
Drivers 11 (8 woofers, 3 tweeters) Connectivity HDMI eARC, ethernet, Wi-Fi, Apple AirPlay 2 CPU quad core 1.4 GHz A-53 Memory 1GB SDRAM, 4GB NV Dimensions 1141.7x87x115.7mm Weight 6.25kg
The Arc is Sonos’ first foray into the world of Dolby Atmos and 3D audio. Sonos has been making home cinema products for seven years now, since the Playbar, and took a big step into the waters of surround sound with the ability to combine satellite speakers with the soundbar for a 5.1 system. But home cinema technology moved on, Dolby Atmos arrived, and 3D audio with height became the big new thing.
Really, the only flaw the fantastic Sonos Beam had was a lack of Dolby Atmos height support, and actually we didn’t mind that because it was an excellent price and Atmos support in speakers that size and price range is pretty limited.
But there was still left an Atmos sized gap in Sonos’ range, and that’s where the Arc swoops in, bringing a bigger, beefier soundstage in every way, including upfiring drivers for adding height to the stage, as well as more effort to produce spatial surround-like sound from the single bar, as is all the rage these days.
It’s a much bigger, beefier bar to match the sound upgrades: whereas the Sonos Beam is suited to TVs from 42 inches up, this is around the same width as a 55-incher.
At £799, it comes in at a pretty typical price for Atmos bars. It’s common for them to break the £1k mark (especially if they include rear speakers and/or a subwoofer), though more budget options are possible at closer to £500. Those won’t have the fit and finish of the Arc, of course… nor its actual prowess with sound, but we don’t want to get ahead of ourselves there.
This story is from the July 2020 edition of T3 Magazine.
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This story is from the July 2020 edition of T3 Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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