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Review: Bowers & Wilkins Panorama Sound Bar

The Bowers & Wilkins wall-mounted Panorama Sound Bar is barely thicker than your HDTV but delivers theaterlike sound. The company even claims that in a perfectly shaped room you can hear some sound coming from behind you.
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Rating:

8/10

WIRED
Nine drivers pack super-wide stereo field and paranoia- inducing surround in a small package (43 x 7 x 5 inches). Built-in sub = rump-shaking lows. Swank mirrored-black finish (polishing cloth included).
TIRED
Can't autocalibrate surround effects for room layout — and little ability to tweak manually.

Let's be honest: Nothing can replace an eight-speaker 7.1 system blasting sound at you from all sides. But for a wall-mounted bar not much thicker than your HDTV, the B&W Panorama comes surprisingly close.

Like all sound bars, the B&W fires audio from its sides, reflecting the waves off walls so they reach you via a longer path than the sound waves aimed directly at you. The small delay between when you hear the direct sound and when you hear the reflected sound makes the B&W's sound stage seem wider, as if the speakers are farther apart than they really are. B&W claims that in a perfectly shaped room you can even hear some sound coming from behind you, though we weren't able to duplicate the experience in our less-than-optimal test room.

Still, we were blown away by how much larger movies sounded through the Panorama. It produces noticeable lows and separates sound effects from center-channel speech, delivering a theaterlike experience. And we loved its polished-nickel case.

Like all products from Bowers & Wilkins, the Panorama is not cheap, nor does it sound cheap. If you're a serious audio connoisseur who's wallet heavy and space poor, the Panorama's playing your tune.