Wireless Surround Sound – The End Of Cable Clutter?

June 30, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Hardware 

Recently more and more manufacturers have started to offer home theater systems with wireless speakers or a wireless surround sound kit. From a homeowners standpoint, eliminating long speaker cable runs is certainly a big plus. Multi-channel surround sound is a fairly new phenomenon and as such many older houses are not wired for rear speakers, not to mention 7.1 systems. As such a wireless solution might be the logical conclusion. But how reliable are these wireless surround sound kits in a real-world scenario and do these options really eliminate the dreaded cable clutter?

 

Some wireless surround sound kits, such as the LG or Rocketfish allow to connect 2 speakers to a wireless receiver unit. This eliminates the cables from the front to the back. However, still cables need to be run from the receiver to each speaker and as such the amount of cables is just reduced but not eliminated. Another wireless surround sound product from Amphony comes with separate receivers for each speaker which in comparison to the other products does reduce the cable clutter, albeit not eliminate cables completely.

 

Will the wireless have any effect on performance? Audio quality is a main concern. In picking a wireless system, one should choose a system where (a) the transmission itself does not pick up any noise or degradation in order to maintain the audio quality and (b) the wireless amplifier itself should be a high-quality amplifier with minimal distortion. Also, the size of the wireless speaker amplifier is a consideration as the receiver should be invisible.

 

In a surround sound application, such as a home theater setting, the audio from each speaker naturally should be in sync with the video and also with the audio of the other speakers. Some wireless surround sound kits, such as the product from Rocketfish, will introduce a significant delay to the signal. Therefore when choosing a wireless surround sound kit, it is important to look closely at how much latency the wireless unit will introduce. The Amphony product adds a little less than 1 ms delay which should be sufficiently low for pretty much any application.

 

One of the main issues with wireless devices of any sort is interference from other devices. As more and more consumer devices go wireless, the available frequency space becomes more and more limited. Especially the 900 MHz and 2.4 GHz bands are exceptionally crowded, due to WiFi hot spots, cell phones with Bluetooth etc. Picking a system that avoids these frequency bands may be the logical choice, such as systems working at 5.8 GHz.

 

While wireless speakers and wireless surround sound kits are suited for use in a home theater setting, their use is not limited to that application. In particular setting up speakers in another room often poses a challenge in terms of running speaker wires or using speakers outdoors. Just imagine being able to set up a speaker in your backyard in minutes. The possibilities are endless.

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