Even in this age of digital TV, the audio output stages and speakers of TV still seem to be regarded as an area where compromises are made particularly with lower priced units. I've never heard one of those sound bars, do they sound good?
I don't know what is going on with sound these days. At one time the sound on TV, while not hifi, was crystal clear and non fatiguing to listen to. I had a 27 inch Sony CRT type which epitimised this. There was a genuine effort to make the sound good. And the limiting factor was the small speaker, so you didn't get extended base.
Then things changed. In general the speaker chassis improved but the electronics got a lot worse- mainly I think because of the adoption of class D. On our TV I was going to put a couple of 4mm terminals on the back to drive some external speakers. But the sound was worse- like severe cross over distortion. I then tried the earphone socket- even worse on HiFi phones. Before anyone pops up and says there must be something wrong with my set, just think first.
I have noticed this disturbing edginess on so called hifi systems too. I don't know if people are immune or what.
My fairly high end laptop sound is the same. it has 'HiFi' speakers but very edgy sound. There is even a significant DC offset- once again the amps are class D.
I was in John Lewis' and overheard a classical pianist reviewing the various systems accompanied by plenty bull from the salesman. One system stood out and sounded similar to a real piano. The rest were quite simply awful. Which system did he chose- one of the awful ones. I couldn't believe it .
Yes, sound bars can sound very good. They input digital and have built-in analogue amps. But the best is separate speakers, either left and right or L&R + bass sub.
I bought a nice pair of bookshelf speakers for £30 and am upgrading my DAC/headphone amp soon so I will used the old DAC to drive a couple of amps in one of the speaker cabs.
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