Header banner
Revain logoHome Page
Rick Ross photo
1 Level
1339 Review
67 Karma

Review on Sony AIRSA10 S-AIR Speaker System - Black: Discontinued Product Review and Features by Rick Ross

Revainrating 3 out of 5

A little good; here are the cons

The device has good and bad sides. Good things to learn from other places; This focuses on the bad so you can tell if it's a deal breaker for you: - Quiet. Combined with the lack of a remote control, there's no other way to quickly turn off the audio stream than pressing the power button or the mode button. If you use this device to watch TV (I have it on the patio so you can watch TV through the porthole while enjoying a cigar or cigar) having loud commercials suddenly burst in the middle of loud commercials is a major disadvantage. Silent movie soundtrack. (Muting your main amp's output will not affect the output of this unit.) -- Overwhelming bass with no control. Constructed too tall to match its fragile main speakers. I currently have paper towels stuffed into the woofer cones and am looking for a more muted method. В то время как гулкие басы могут быть хороши для некоторой музыки, когда у вас есть саундтрек к телевизионным новостям, который перекачивает басы, чтобы придать ведущему авторитетный звук, он подавляет средние частоты, так что при выходной мощности 8 Вт вы едва можете разобрать, что You say. --[Related to above] No tone or tone controls. The unit has 13 buttons on the top of the unit and the two main functions Mute and Tone/EQ are missing underneath. Instead, you get things like alarm settings. There is no remote control for the unit itself. You can only remotely control the main amplifier. As such, you'll need to connect it to a nearby network where you'll hear it to be able to quickly reach those top buttons. Despite carefully placed promotional photos, don't be fooled into thinking this device doesn't work. I don't have the required power cord coming out of the back (I didn't have one, but it's pretty obvious they hide it in these photos). loses connection about once a week and you have to reset everything. When pairing a device (to avoid interference with nearby devices), you can avoid C; I thought Channel B was great for that.

Pros
  • Home Audio
Cons
  • Crumpled packaging