The Yamaha ATS-2090: 36" SoundBar with Wireless Subwoofer and Alexa Built-in is now on sale for $299.99, a significant discount of $49.01 off the full purchase price of $349. Share on Facebook (opens ...
Setting up the hardware is as simple as plugging the soundbar into the mains, then into the TV's ARC or eARC port using the ...
A couple of days ago we covered the Klipsch R-620F deal that is available for just $259, its lowest price in over a year. For the price, they offer excellent sound quality so you should definitely ...
For the price, the Yamaha True X Bar 40A delivers impressively detailed and colorful sound. It has two built-in subwoofers ...
Yamaha will release a compact soundbar with a wireless subwoofer and an affordable price in October. The Yamaha SR-C30A soundbar is priced lower than the Sonos Ray which is the gold standard for ...
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Yamaha True X Surround 90A review

At £2116 / $3500 / AU$4499, the True X Surround 90A is a pricey bit of home cinema kit. You can forget the likes of the ...
Absence of HDMI support hobbles what is otherwise a great-sounding sound bar. TheYamaha YAS-203 ($300, 3.5 stars) is quite the budget alternative in this roundup, but by trimming $100 to $200 off the ...
Read our full Yamaha YSP-2500 review. Let’s face it, most of us would love to have some kind of surround sound system to go with our big fancy TV, but burying wires, mounting speakers, and calibrating ...
Building a home theater can be a big project. There’s the television, obviously—4K, OLED—but what’s a stunningly clear and detailed picture without equally impressive sound? You know, something big ...
Yamaha was making soundbars a decade before most modern pretenders, so has more experience than most in terms of what works, what doesn’t, and what people want. Its new model is the Yamaha SR-C30A, ...
Yamaha today introduced the flagship NS-SW1000 1,000-watt subwoofer that integrates the company’s signature technologies to deliver superior bass to premium home theater systems for $2500. This ...
TV and home video editor Ty Pendlebury joined CNET Australia in 2006, and moved to New York City to be a part of CNET in 2011. He tests, reviews and writes about the latest TVs and audio equipment.