Top positive review
173 people found this helpful
Great sounding soundbar if you just take 5 minutes to adjust the settings!
By N. Ewald on Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2016
I saw all of these other more negative reviews, and wanted to post my experience. Also note that I got this on an Amazon Goldbox deal for $52, so my review is based on this price point. Firstly, the soundbar was packaged well, wrapped in foam with foam pieces around the end, and the box itself shipped in a larger box with paper padding. The soundbar looks new - no evidence of any prior owners like you sometimes get with refurbished products. The remote was wrapped, with separate wrapped batteries. It came with a digital optical cable, a digital coaxial cable, and stereo (red/white) RCA cables, so that you could hook it up no matter what output your TV supports (they get extra points for coming with a digital optical cable! Even my 5.1 surround Samsung unit didn't come with one). Setup was easy, and it perfectly matches the horizontal space my 32" LG TV takes up (the soundbar was for a smaller TV in the bedroom with a Chromecast hooked up to it). I simply plugged the provided digital optical cable into my TV's optical output, and into the input on the soundbar, then plugged the soundbar into the wall. I started casting some music to the Chromecast, and the soundbar switched to the appropriate input automatically. The sound quality is leaps and bounds over the built in speakers of my LG TV. I read the instruction manual (took ~5 minutes - very well written manual - clear and concise), and tweaked the sound a bit. Bass and Treble can be adjusted -6/0/+6, and the settings that sounded best to my ears were +4 Bass (to compensate for no subwoofer) and +1 Treble. With these settings you get a surprisingly large amount of Bass (certainly more than my TV speakers provided) and very clear highs and mids. I only have the soundbar turned up to maybe 10% of the maximum volume and it's plenty loud - the power this little bar can put out is good. I also have the DTS TruVolume option turned on, since it's for the bedroom and this allows me to keep the volume quiter on the soundbar while still hearing the lower volume parts of a show/movie. The DTS TruSurround I kept turned off - I didn't like how it sounded. That's my one true negative - the TruSurround option just makes the sound more muddled - you lose the bass even if you crank it to +6, and it mixes the treble and mid more closely together. I didn't buy the bar for a surround sound replacement though, so I won't remove a star. Perfectly for me, my LG remote's power button and volume buttons turn on/off the soundbar and turn the volume up/down. So turning on/off my TV also turns on/off the soundbar, and I can use my TV remote to change the volume, so after setup I was able to stow the soundbar remote away. The remote has a Bluetooth pairing button on it, but the top of the soundbar does as well, so I wasn't losing that functionality. Speaking of the Bluetooth pairing, it was simple. Hold the Bluetooth button down for 5 seconds, and the soundbar's LEDs start running up and down, letting you know it's in "pairing" mode. My phone saw it right way, and paired immediately. Range seems about the same as my Amazon Echo - just fine. I don't see myself using the Bluetooth feature often with the Chromecast, but I wanted to test it for this review. I think the negative reviews for this product didn't know how to set it up properly. For 2.0 units you should always (in my opinion) tweak the treble/bass settings to accommodate for the missing woofer. This unit makes it so easy to do too. Also, my LG TV's audio options (fake surround, ClearVoice, etc.) were initially affecting the output to the soundbar, making it sound much worse. I went into the audio options and disabled the TV speakers (which disabled these additional options) and the audio coming out of this soundbar is excellent now. Other reviewers need to be cognizant of the fact that your TV's audio settings may be affecting the quality of the sound pushed to the soundbar, and since most are designed for the tinny television speakers in the TV, it makes the sound coming out of the bar worse. All in all, for $52, this is a great unit if you're looking to add great sound to a smaller TV set (fits my 32" TV exactly). Has great volume range, sounds great, has Bluetooth, and (for me at least) works with my television remote, so I don't have to keep two remotes on my nightstand. If you can find it on sale again, it's definitely worth the price. It might even be worth the regular $99, though I haven't researched what else is available at the price range - there may be better options. For $52 though, you can't go wrong with this Vizio. P.S. - even though the soundbar doesn't come with a subwoofer, it still has a subwoofer output. This means at any point in the future, if you buy an RCA powered subwoofer, you can add it to this soundbar to turn it from a 2.0 setup into a 2.1. I like that it has the option.
Top critical review
It is better with bluetooth or aux
By JJSoul on Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2019
**Update** After getting an optical splitter with optical to analog converter, this is working out perfectly. I believe that optical and bluetooth are the only two ways to get clean, crips, and loud sound. RCA (Analog) creates a static hum that you are unable to ignore and it never reaches an acceptable volume to hear. You also need to turn the TV all the way up to even utilize in analog. I wouldn't even attempt the analog. It is probably where most of the comments are having the issue with sound. If Analog is the only output you have, I would opt for something else. With optical, I have the bar set to volume 2. At volume 2 I have to set my TV to 20 before I can start to hear the TV speakers (top is about 60). That means it is 10x more powerful than the TV speakers. The splitter was so that I could run to my BOSE receiver; which is so old it only accepts analog input, so I had to get a converter. Even converting from optical to analog, the sound to my BOSE is MUCH higher as well. **Original** I have been testing out a few different ways to do this. The only option I have is to split my aux output so that I can get to two different devices. In aux with TVOL on, there is a low static you can constantly hear no matter what level it is on. The sound is louder but the static noise is horrible. Due to using aux, I have to turn the TV waaaay up in order to use this without TVOL on. My TV goes from 0 -60. I have to put this on 30 with the sound bar volume all the way up in order to hear it. With optical is sounds nice, static hum still there if TVOL is on, but at least when it is off I can use the volume. TV - 20 with this about 1/2 up. Bluetooth seems to work nice. I can sync my phone and any of my laptops to use it. That was the main use I had gotten it for; but being able to use this with the TV would have been nice. If you want this for your TV, I would get something else. If you want to use it to boost your computer audio it is a nice little device but there are better ones out there that can give you more sound and better dual use.
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