Bowers & Wilkins Panorama 5.1 soundbar review

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5.1 Surround soundbar Review

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62 B&w Panorama ➜ £1,500 Approx ➜ www.bowers-wilkins.co.uk

Raising the bar B&W has launched its first high-grade soundbar, the Panorama, but, asks Jim Hill, can the brand’s trademark magic survive the form factor?

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here’s no denying the convenience of a soundbar. Essentially an entire speaker system in one submarine-shaped cabinet, they are designed for wall-mounting underneath your flatscreen TV, with many offering technologies that simulate a 5.1 soundfield. But while they are certainly practical and increasingly popular, they also usually involve a sonic compromise, and I’ve found   the results are patchy at best. So can B&W’s high-end offering, named the Panorama, set a new standard for one-box cinemas? There are design similarities between the Panorama and B&W’s Zeppelin iPod hi-fi – not surprising

Home Cinema Choice September 2009

as the latter was a huge commercial hit for the company, and proved it could turn out tuneful systems as well as studio-grade speakers.   The Panorama shares its exquisite engineering, with tapering cabinets and a seductive stainless steel skin. It’s definitely the most elegant soundbar I’ve come across, but not the smallest. The unit is elongated to accommodate nine separate drivers and weighs over 14kg. Unlike most products of this type, the subwoofer is built-in and so is the amplification. A type C digital amp drives all five channels at 25W each with another 50W powering the sub. So what you have is a 5.1 surround sound system, complete with

Product: 5.1-channel soundbar Position: Unashamedly high-end, single bar solution Peers: Yamaha YSP-40D; Marantz ES7001

amplification and a neat pebbleshaped remote control to switch audio inputs. You could connect   your TV and an iPod to one of the analogue inputs for example, and   a Blu-ray player or set-top box to one  of the digital inputs. What you

don’t get here, however, is any kind of video input, so you can forget about HDMI switching altogether. It would have been useful, but would also have added a whole new level of complexity and price. Without video circuitry, the Panorama is easy to set up. Simply connect your source – in my case a bitstreaming BD deck – and you’re ready to rock.


Reviews 63 The speaker is designed to sit on   a table or fix to a wall via its own bracket; a switch in the menu recalibrates the speaker for each position. You’ll need the little remote to do this from the sofa, so don’t lose it. There’s no onscreen menu, of course, but the Panorama’s display   is large enough to see what volume level you’re on and toggle between stereo, wide and surround sound. In surround mode, all six channels are active as the Panorama floods the room with crisp sound. The fronts and centre face directly forwards, while the rear speakers mounted   on the curve of the speaker use the side and back walls to bounce soundwaves. With Battlestar Galactica’s lively 5.1 mix (Blu-ray,   on sale September), I got a good impression of Starbuck’s Viper taking off and zooming through space. Without rear speakers the Panorama doesn’t quite manage to place the craft behind my head, as a traditional 5.1 setup would – I’ve yet to meet   a soundbar that can – but it does disperse the audio to create   a tangible sense of spatial depth. What sets the Panorama apart from its rivals is its refreshing clarity and impressive separation. With all those drive units huddled like peas in

a pod, the sound could become muddled and compressed, but here it can really sing. Switching into stereo mode cuts out all but the front left and right channels and delivers   a tuneful performance with twochannel material, and it still projects well into the room. Its dispersive nature means there’s a wide sweet spot, so you won’t lose the stereo image when you cross the room. You can enhance the dialogue channel if necessary, but there’s no real need – voices, effects and music all sound distinct in the mix and propel well into the room. You can also make basic adjustments to   the tone to suit a space with hard surfaces or soft furnishings, which does make quite a difference. And the diminutive subwoofers are remarkably effective. I found myself dialling the level down more often than up, but it’s nice to find a low frequency extension lurking in such   a slim cabinet.

➜ Specifications

Amplified power: 5 x 25W Subwoofer: 50W Drive units: 1 x 1in metal dome tweeter; 4 x 3in surround channels; 4 x 3.5in subwoofers Frequency range: -6dB at 36Hz and 50kHz Decodes: Dolby Digital; Dolby Pro-Logic II; DTS Inputs: 2 x optical digital; 1 x coaxial digital; 2 x analogue; stereo minijack Outputs: Subwoofer pre-out Dimensions: 130(h) x 1,090(w) x 186 (d)mm Weight: 14.1kg Also features: RS232 port; wall bracket included; remote control

Untouchable Speaker array: There are nine drivers lurking in the Panorama’s chassis

Despite the paucity of features (did I mention there’s no radio tuner or iPod dock, or HD audio support?) Bowers & Wilkins’ Panorama is a formidable soundbar debutante.   I suspect it’ll sell by the truckload

Verdict Bowers & Wilkins Panorama  £1,500 Approx  Price check: www.techradar.com/613210 Highs: Practical and beautiful design; superb build quality Lows: No video switching; limited rear channel effects Performance: Design: Features:

Overall: September 2009 Home Cinema Choice


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