Recommended Posts

To OP:

Your best bet is to go to a good Hi-Fi shop, tell them your budget and requirements. They should then sit you in a sound room , and let you listen to various set ups that meet what you need (I've even known them to come and set up test rigs in peoples own homes, as you listening area can affect the sound also). Pick the one that sounds best to you.

We all hear sound different (I'm always arguing with my wife over it when watching films), so some one recommending an actual product wont really help, other than to say with the build quality.

I would try to get the best you can afford and add extra items (like sub-woofer) later.

I'm still listening to my films in stereo, through some very good B&W speakers, and an old but good Sony amp. I will add to this later as funds allow, with a good centre speaker, then amp upgrade, with rear speakers to follow.

Posts about speakers always being the weakest link were split here:

https://www.neowin.net/forum/index.php?showtopic=741616

https://www.neowin.net/forum/index.php?showtopic=751968

Edited by Fred Derf
  • 2 weeks later...

I picked up the Sony HTSS-1300 just after Christmas for ?246.

It's awesome for me, and the good thing is it supports PCM over HDMI meaning I can get HD audio through my PS3.

http://www.sony.co.uk/product/hcs-cinema-s...d-kit/ht-ss1300

They do tall speakers as well - http://www.sony.co.uk/product/hcs-cinema-s...d-kit/ht-sf1300

I think they might be discontinued now though?://

I done all my homework and got advice from AVForums, it was between the Sony setup and the Onkyo HTX-22HD (5.1) system. However the Onkyo surround speakers have to be purchased separately and absolutely nowhere had them in stock at the time.

You mentioned the Logitech Z5500 in your original post. I am using the same thing with one of my pc's, and it is very good value for money. And with this set, you do not need a switch box for all your inputs because you can connect six sources simultaneously to this. And it also sounds pretty good considering what it costs. Although the satellite speakers are directional, so you have to find the "sweet spot". And the sub can be a bit boomy, but that can easily be turned down.

All in all, it is a good set for about 200 pounds, and will suit your needs perfectly. Just my 2 cents.

You mentioned the Logitech Z5500 in your original post. I am using the same thing with one of my pc's, and it is very good value for money. And with this set, you do not need a switch box for all your inputs because you can connect six sources simultaneously to this. And it also sounds pretty good considering what it costs. Although the satellite speakers are directional, so you have to find the "sweet spot". And the sub can be a bit boomy, but that can easily be turned down.

All in all, it is a good set for about 200 pounds, and will suit your needs perfectly. Just my 2 cents.

It has 4 inputs?

Logitech Z5500 is better suited for PCs.

For something with your TV get a setup that supports HDMI input and output (Y)

That will mean it most likely accepts PCM over HDMI meaning HD audio from devices that can decode (PS3 and some Blu Ray players), plus it's a lot more efficient. You can't do HD audio over optical, not enough bandwidth.

1 HDMI lead from your TV to receiver (for picture), then everything else (like PS3/360) just plugs right into the receiver with an HDMI cable. Only exceptions would be any devices that don't operate on HDMI.

My Wii has phono cables going to my receiver, but I need to connect it's component cables directly to the TV. My receiver doesn't accept component video cables, just HDMI (although some receivers do).

Edited by Audioboxer

Audioboxer:

You're looking at at least ?400 for onlya receiver> that can handle HDMI the way you are describing. :wacko::

WhatHiFi is a good starting place to compare equipment, I am told.
Oh, God, no. :pinch::

Those are the exact sorts of say-nothing product fluff pieces you want to avoid.

Audioboxer:

You're looking at at least ?400 for onlya receiver> that can handle HDMI the way you are describing. :wacko::

You more certainly aren't.

My Sony HTSS-1300 cost me ?240 and it supports HDMI input and ouput (3 HDMI in, 1 HDMI out), plus PCM over HDMI.

There's a few other kits around that price that will also do it.

You more certainly aren't.

My Sony HTSS-1300 cost me ?240 and it supports HDMI input and ouput (3 HDMI in, 1 HDMI out), plus PCM over HDMI.

There's a few other kits around that price that will also do it.

+1 my panasonic (cant remember model number, too lazy to look:pp) has basically the same and cost me ?260ish and is very nice quality.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I think every American should have a course in a 'dry sense of humour' at school; and perhaps 'using sarcasm in jest' oh, and also 'the use or irony in humour'. Slapstick is just about all Americans can understand. It's a pity, as this is the most basic of humour, that requires no thought at all. It's hilarious to watch a whole room collapse with laughter while yanks sit scratching their heads...
    • What they really need to do is automatically spell "loses" and "lose" correctly since nobody seems to know how to anymore. Then they blame spellcheck/autocomplete and don't realize autocomplete is just filling in the word for them automatically so it was misspelled in the first place.
    • If someone chooses to continue using SB and therefore goes through the manual intervention in the thread, afterwards the BSOD problem is gone. Whether they then re-enable the task doesn't matter, they're done, though on such machines it might pay to keep it disabled in case the next update (if there is a next) causes the same problem. OTOH, if someone disables SB in the BIOS, the problem is also gone. Incidentally, I noticed that this task exists even on machines that don't support SB. It's just installed across the board...and runs. Doing what on such machines is a little hazy.
    • qBittorrent 5.2.2 by Razvan Serea The qBittorrent project aims to provide a Free Software alternative to µtorrent. qBittorrent is an advanced and multi-platform BitTorrent client with a nice user interface as well as a Web UI for remote control and an integrated search engine. qBittorrent aims to meet the needs of most users while using as little CPU and memory as possible. qBittorrent is a truly Open Source project, and as such, anyone can and should contribute to it. qBittorrent features: Polished µTorrent-like User Interface Well-integrated and extensible Search Engine Simultaneous search in most famous BitTorrent search sites Per-category-specific search requests (e.g. Books, Music, Movies) All Bittorrent extensions DHT, Peer Exchange, Full encryption, Magnet/BitComet URIs, ... Remote control through a Web user interface Nearly identical to the regular UI, all in Ajax Advanced control over trackers, peers and torrents Torrents queueing and prioritizing Torrent content selection and prioritizing UPnP / NAT-PMP port forwarding support Available in ~25 languages (Unicode support) Torrent creation tool Advanced RSS support with download filters (inc. regex) Bandwidth scheduler IP Filtering (eMule and PeerGuardian compatible) IPv6 compliant Available on most platforms: Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, OS/2, FreeBSD qBittorrent 5.2.2 changelog: FEATURE: Use D-Bus to show file in file managers (Chocobo1) #24340 BUGFIX: Fix friendlyUnitCompact precision calculation (vafada) #24323 BUGFIX: Remove all top-level folders (glassez) #24333 BUGFIX: Use proper API for checking exit status (Chocobo1) #24349 BUGFIX: Delete stale lockfile when hostname mismatch (TurboTheTurtle, glassez) #24363 BUGFIX: Fix wrong removal procedure of watched folder paths (Chocobo1) #24413 BUGFIX: Don't reannounce before interface changes are applied (glassez) #24447 BUGFIX: Use Latin script for Bosnian locale name (Andy Ye) #24342 WEBUI: Fix performance of global checkbox toggling (tehcneko) #24316 WEBUI: Fix Safari transfer list header misalignment (Piccirello) #24377 WEBUI: Fix error when submitting magnet before metadata loads (Piccirello) #24378 WEBUI: Use correct row id when updating Rss Downloader feed selection (Chocobo1) #24402 WEBUI: Use SameSite=Lax for session cookie to fix cross-site login (Piccirello) #24422 WEBUI: Bring back properties panel expand/collapse button (vafada) #24430 WEBAPI: Only use X-Forwarded-Host header when reverse proxy support is enabled (Chocobo1) #24457 RSSS: Fix "RSS Smart Episode Filter" RegEx (nathanon-akk, glassez) #24398 RSS: Fix previously matched episode format (glassez) #24452 WINDOWS: Fix Python fallback search path (TurboTheTurtle) #24325 WINDOWS: NSIS: Allow to install x64 binary on ARM64 (Chocobo1) #24358 Download: qBittorrent 5.2.2 | 41.1 MB (Open Source) Download: qBittorrent 64-bit installer (qt6) | 43.6 MB Links: qBittorrent Home page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Veteran
      branfont went up a rank
      Veteran
    • Reacting Well
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • First Post
      Cosminus earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Year In
      ThatGuyOnline earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Jeroen Wilms earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      498
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      185
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      126
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      87
    5. 5
      neufuse
      72
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!