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Comparison Harman Kardon Surround vs Sony BDV-E6100

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Harman Kardon Surround
Sony BDV-E6100
Harman Kardon SurroundSony BDV-E6100
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from $420.00 up to $594.00
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Main
Chromecast support.
Acoustic system
Acoustics
5.1
shelf
5.1
floor
Front (RMS)50 W/channel125 W/channel
Rear (RMS)125 W/channel
Centre (RMS)50 W/channel250 W/channel
Subwoofer (RMS)120 W/channel250 W/channel
Total power (RMS)370 W1000 W
Frequency range20 – 20000 Hz
Sensitivity80 dB
Wireless connection
Bass reflex
Amplifier
Front125 W/channel
Rear125 W/channel
Centre250 W/channel
Subwoofer250 W
Receiver
Media format
 
 
CD/DVD
Blu-ray
3D
DLNA
BD-Live
Child protection
Parental control
Multimedia
 
 
 
Bluetooth
Wi-Fi
 
Smart TV /Sony Entertainment Network/
FM tuner
TV tuner
Bluetooth
Wi-Fi
NFC
Video file formats
 
 
 
 
 
DVD/VCD
MPEG4
H.264
AVCHD
MKV
Other file formats
 
 
 
MP3/WMA
Audio CD
JPEG
Audio decoders
DTS
 
 
 
Dolby Digital
 
 
 
DTS
DTS 96/24
DTS-HD High Resolution
DTS ES
Dolby Digital
Dolby Digital Plus
Dolby Pro Logic II
Dolby TrueHD
Connection
Outputs
 
Dolby Digital 5.1
HDMI1 pc1 pc
Inputs
 
linear
optical
LAN (RJ45)
USB input
linear
optical
LAN (RJ45)
HDMI4 pcs
General
Remote control
Magnetic shielding
Satellite body materialplasticplastic
Subwoofer body materialplastic/MDFwood
Player dimensions (WxHxD)305x60x155 mm430x50x296 mm
Front speaker dimensions (HxWxD)274x105x86 cm
65x10x10 cm /without stand; 120x26x26 cm / with stand/
Rear speaker dimensions (HxWxD)
65x10x10 cm /without stand; 120x26x26 cm / with stand/
Centre channel dimensions (HxWxD)365x73x106 cm9x24x8.5 cm
Subwoofer dimensions (HxWxD)496x122x397 cm36.5x22.5x34.5 cm
Color
Added to E-Catalogfebruary 2020july 2013

Front (RMS)

Rated output of one front channel of a home theater system. This paragraph indicates the power of the complete front speaker, however, it can also be used to determine the characteristics of the built-in amplifier — its rated power on a particular channel (not necessarily the front one), usually, slightly exceeds the power of the corresponding speaker.

Rated power in this case is the highest average (root mean square, RMS) sound power that the speaker is capable of delivering for an unlimited time, working without failures and overloads. Individual signal jumps can be stronger, but the power of acoustics is determined precisely by RMS.

The higher this indicator(regardless of whether we are talking about front or some other speakers) — the louder the speakers, the better they are suitable for large rooms. At the same time, in a small room, too high power may be unnecessary, because. operating the speaker at full volume will cause discomfort — despite the fact that powerful acoustics also have the appropriate dimensions, weight and price. More detailed recommendations on the optimal power of the speaker components, depending on the characteristics of the situation, can be found in special sources.

Rear (RMS)

Rated output of one home theater rear channel. For more information about the meaning of this parameter, see "Front" above.

Centre (RMS)

Rated power of one centre channel of a home theater. For more information about the meaning of this parameter, see "Front" above.

Subwoofer (RMS)

Rated power of the subwoofer supplied with the home theater. See "Front" above for details on power rating; here we note that subwoofers often have a fairly high power, because. they are designed to cover low frequencies in all audio channels.

Total power (RMS)

The total power rating of all home theater speakers, including subwoofers. The value of the rated power is described in detail in paragraph "Front" above.

Frequency range

The range of audio frequencies reproduced by a home theater speaker system. The wider the range — the richer the sound, the less likely it is that the acoustics will “cut off” part of the low or high frequencies. When evaluating this indicator, one should proceed from the fact that the range perceived by the average human ear is from 16 Hz to 20 kHz. However, modern home cinemas for the most part cover this range completely or almost completely.

Sensitivity

The sensitivity value determines the volume of the speaker system when an external signal of a certain power is applied to it. With the same signal strength and resistance (impedance), more sensitive acoustics provide greater volume.

Wireless connection

The ability to connect speakers to the base via a wireless interface — most often a radio. The main advantage of this connection is the absence of connecting wires, which significantly limit the movement of the speakers and can interfere, getting confused with each other and with other wires. The disadvantages of wireless speakers are often lower sound quality than wired counterparts, as well as high cost.

Front

Rated power delivered by the built-in home theater power amplifier per front channel.

Note that in home theaters the rated power of the amplifier output to any channel (any channel, not just the front one) is usually equal to the rated power of the standard speaker installed on this channel (see above). Therefore, many manufacturers do not give the characteristics of the built-in amplifier separately at all — firstly, they are easy to determine from the information about the speakers, and secondly, when using a system with complete acoustics, these data are not required. However, information about the power of the amplifier is indispensable if you plan to use third-party speakers instead of standard acoustics. The rated power of each such speaker must not be lower than the rated power on the corresponding amplifier channel — otherwise, various undesirable phenomena are possible at high volume, from sound distortion to damage to the speaker.
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