Sonos has announced that it’s Sonos Ray soundbar is finally having it’s poor playback patched after issues with the device were discovered by a UK based tech publication.
What Hi Fi Sound and Vision identified a “Significant flaw in its bass presentation that results in an unusual low-frequency resonant buzz across a range of movies and music”.
Apparently, Sonos had played with the benchmark-settings in an effort to overcome the physical size limitations of scale with the device when it came to the delivery of cinematic sound from an affordable, desktop-sized speaker.
Last week, a new version of the Ray’s software was released, and Sonos has informed reviewers who found the flaw, that, in direct response to our findings, it includes a significant tweak to the Ray’s low-end response.
According to Sonos, the new tuning slightly dips frequencies below 50Hz in line with increases in overall volume level, which should help mitigate unwanted vibrations.
Sonos claimed that ther problem had arisen because its curved bass-reflex design has a port frequency of around 55 Hz that becomes susceptible to ‘chuffing’ when managing resonant frequencies, which had cropped up throughout the content reviewers were using for testing.
Year to date Sonos shares are down 36%.