Wireless Wonders: 7 Wireless Speakers Reviewed Sonos PLAY:1

Sonos PLAY:1


Performance
Features
Ergonomics
Value
PRICE $199

AT A GLANCE
Plus
Great sound—now better with Trueplay
Elegant, simple app
Minus
Slightly overemphasized bass
No hi-res support

THE VERDICT
A best-in-class app and refined sound keep Sonos a top contender.

At $199, the PLAY:1 marks the affordable entry point into the well-established world of Sonos, which includes larger powered speakers, soundbars, and a subwoofer. Like Bluesound, Sonos also has streamers and streamer/amplifiers for connecting an existing A/V system or passive speakers.

The PLAY:1 is a two-way speaker with a 3.5-inch aluminum woofer and 0.75-inch cloth dome tweeter driven by separate Class D amplifiers. It has a wired LAN jack but no additional inputs to connect other audio sources. Although Sonos has yet to embrace hi-res audio, the PLAY:1 does support ALAC, FLAC, WAV, and AIFF file formats up to 44/16 (that is, CD quality). Two PLAY:1 speakers can be linked for stereo playback.

The PLAY:1’s enclosure is designed to withstand a high-humidity environment, such as a bathroom (though it’s not waterproof). The Sonos PLAY:1, PLAY:3, and PLAY:5 speakers also now benefit from a new feature: Trueplay auto EQ. This lets you apply AVR- style room correction to improve sound quality, especially when the speaker is in a less than sonically ideal environment (a bathroom, for example).

The Sonos app walks you through setup with an illustrated guide; it’s like the wireless speaker equivalent of Ikea. I had no problem setting up rooms/zones or speaker groups and pairing speakers for stereo playback. Trueplay setup was also simple: You just walk around the room waving your smartphone or tablet for 60 seconds while a test tone plays, and the speaker then processes the results.

The PLAY:1 did an excellent job of not sounding like a single speaker. Sound quality was full and the envelopment good enough to prevent me from easily pinpointing speaker location by ear. With the McGuire track, the bass sounded tight—maybe a little goosed in level compared with what I heard from the Bluesound, but the extra oomph didn’t necessarily detract from the sound quality. After I ran the Trueplay routine, bass sounded a tad more balanced, but overall, Trueplay didn’t make that much of a difference in my particular setup.

As I listened to the Floating Points track in stereo, the PLAY:1 pair cast an impressive soundstage, with good delineation between instruments. When the vocals in the track’s final third came in, the sound extended well beyond the speakers. Overall, I found the PLAY:1’s sound to be highly dynamic—something that was particularly evident with drums.

After using some of the slightly less intuitive GUIs tested here, I was quick to embrace the Sonos app. Its interface consists of a vertical bar on the left side that lists your services, playlists, and favorites, while the currently playing content is displayed in a larger panel with album art and track listings. Integration of services like Tidal, Spotify, and even Apple Music—a unique capability among the systems I tested—was seamless, with everything simply appearing as content wrapped within the Sonos ecosystem.

Specs
3.5 in woofer, 0.75 in tweeter
Inputs: Ethernet
Dimensions (WxHxD, Inches): 4.69 x 6.36 x 4.69
Weight (Pounds): 4.08


Related: What You Need to Know About Wireless Multiroom Music Systems

COMMENTS
eugovector's picture

How about, "Anything plus the Chromecast Audio"? Forget 3rd party apps, you want native app support with casting.

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