Samsung HT-C9950W review

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Home cinema System Review

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2 Samsung HT-C9950W ➜ £2,000 Approx ➜ www.samsung.com/uk

Winning formula Expensive it may be, but Danny Phillips thinks this ultra-stylish 7.1-channel all-in-one system is worth saving the pennies for

Home Cinema Choice


Reviews 3 AV/CV Product: 3D-ready all-in-one 7.1. BD system Positioning: Flagship home cinema system Peers: LG HX995TZ; Panasonic SC-BTT755; Sony BDV-E870

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ay ‘all-in-one system’ to most AV enthusiasts and they’ll recoil in horror. But the HT-C9950W is no ordinary one-box affair, it’s what happens when Samsung lets its imagination run wild, blissfully free from price constraints. It’s a 7.1-channel, 3D-capable home cinema system that boasts an impossibly generous feature list and, most significantly,   an inventive new design. It’s surprising to see the HTC9950W deviating so dramatically from the company’s trusted aesthetic of gloss black. However,   the glimmering titanium finish is designed to match Samsung’s high-end 3DTVs, and has more in common with the lifestyle systems   of Loewe or B&O – and that’s some compliment. The wall-mountable main unit, which houses the Blu-ray player, stands on a long pole stand, and when powered up its black volume dial glides forward. It also doubles   as a dot matrix display panel, running through an array of cute animations. Other smart touches include the side-mounted disc slot and pop-up USB port for digital media playback. Equally impressive is the speaker build quality. One-box system speakers are often hollow and lightweight, but these are more robust, and their exposed drivers   and silver finish are pure eye candy. The unusual nature of the system makes it a little tricky to put together without the manual (as I had to)   due to the myriad components that need screwing together. But once assembled it’s a wonderfully discreet, clutter-free system; the powered subwoofer houses all the AV connections and hooks up to the player with a single cable, while the speaker wires can be hidden inside the pole stands.

Socket to me

Silver service: Samsung’s HT-C9950W has been designed to match its high-end flatscreen TVs

On the back of the sub you’ll find three HDMI v1.4 sockets and an Ethernet port for BD-Live and home networking. Surprisingly, the speaker terminals are all binding posts, not spring clips. Tucked around the back of the   BD player is a port specifically for   the supplied Wi-Fi USB dongle.   This makes it possible to wirelessly stream media from PCs and access Samsung’s Internet@TV feature. The feature list doesn’t stop there. Also in the box is a transmitter card and receiver box for wireless rear speakers, which would have been the

ultimate in cable-free convenience had the surround back channels been afforded the same treatment. As it stands, you’ll still have a pair   of wires to conceal. Elsewhere there’s an iPod/iPhone dock in the box, Dolby Pro Logic IIz processing, several weird DSP modes and automatic audio calibration. The system is easy to operate thanks to the delightful onscreen menus and backlit remote. It also loads most Blu-ray discs quickly, although Terminator Salvation took over a minute.

➜ Tech Labs Power consumption: Watts 200

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manages to sidestep the problems of Samsung’s cheaper all-in-one systems to deliver a more mature, refined sound. It’s a genuinely powerful beast. With Iron Man 2’s Monaco Grand Prix fight sequence, The F1 cars roar round the soundstage with real gusto, and when the sliced-up chassis crash to the floor, the noise   is crisp and bracing but rarely jarring on the ears. Only the sharpest sounds at loud volumes give the speakers anything to worry about. In fact, there’s some excellent high-frequency handling at play throughout the film. Inside Tony’s lab, the HT-C9950W easily teases out background ambience and subtle electronic effects, giving the overall sound more intimacy than I expected. Another factor behind the system’s success is the decent powered subwoofer, which adds tight, punchy bottom-end without the overpowering resonance you   get from many passive bass bins.   It chalks up further Brownie points with crystal clear dialogue, smooth effect steering and tight integration between the sub and sats. Combine this impressive sound quality with its other attributes and you get a stunning one-box cinema system that justifies its lofty price tag

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Idling: An average energy consumption for an all-in-one system

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Playing: With test footage, the system draws an average of 75W

Loading: Boot/Java Boot speed & tray eject

12s Tray in to main BD menu

Layer cake Three-dimensional picture quality   is excellent, issues with crosstalk   on certain 3DTVs notwithstanding. Monsters Vs Aliens’ image composition is spot-on, with crisply rendered objects in the foreground and superbly layered backgrounds. The pictures are vibrant and razor-sharp, even through tinted glasses. Non-3D pictures also scrub up nicely, although the Silicon Optix HQV disc reveals one or two chinks   in the armour. Its greater achievement is in sound quality. The HT-C9950W

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60s Disc loading & Java: Not as fast as a standard BD deck in both booting/loading

➜ Specifications

3D playback: yes Video upscaling: yes Up to 1080p Multiregion: no BD Region B, DVD Region 2 HDMI: yes 1 output, 2 inputs. All v1.4 Component video: no Multichannel phono audio: no Stereo inputs only Stereo phono audio: yes 1 x in Digital audio: yes 1 x optical Dolby TrueHD/DTS-HD decoding: yes/yes Dolby True HD/DTS-HD bitstream: yes/yes Profile 2.0: yes with built-in memory Total Amplification (Claimed): 1,000W Dimension (main unit): 490(w) x 163.5(h) x 29(d)mm Weight (main unit): 2.26kg Features: 3D Ready; AllShare DLNA media streaming; Internet@TV; supplied wi-fi USB dongle, iPod dock and transmitter kit for rear speakers; Dolby Pro Logic IIz; Smart Sound, MP3 Enhance, Power Bass; Ethernet port; 1080p DVD upscaling; 3 x USB; 240W subwoofer; FM tuner; auto calibration; DivX HD, WMV HD, MKV, MP3, WMA, JPEG playback

Verdict Samsung HT-C9950W  £2,000 Approx Highs: Abundant features; classy esoteric design; sound and  picture performance Lows: Can get better sound from separates at this price; tricky  to assemble Picture: Design: Features:

Overall: february 2011 Home Cinema Choice


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