![]() The rear speakers and subwoofer, though, are petite. The bar itself isn’t incredibly different from recent soundbars that have sat on my media stand: At 36 inches long, it’s just two inches shorter than the Sony HT-G700 that sat there before it. ![]() Vizio says it took a low-profile approach to this year’s new budget system, which may be a bit of an understatement. It’s probably as close to plug-and-play as a soundbar system can get. There’s no Wi-Fi to configure with this bar – something we’ll touch more on later – and there aren’t any other setup hoops to jump through. Be ready to act quickly and connect your phone via Bluetooth or stream something on your TV, because the Vizio voice prompt does get old after the first few times it announces that it’s searching for an input.īeyond that minor annoyance, that’s it. But it really is just a matter of plugging your bar and subwoofer into power, making a physical connection between the bar and your display, running the included speaker wire from the surround sound speakers to the subwoofer, and powering everything up.įrom there, the bar will automatically search for a content-producing input. Admittedly, there’s not a ton here to slow you down. The system includes the bar itself, a pair of surround sound speakers, and a wireless subwoofer. I was in no rush as I connected it up for testing, but if I were racing a clock, I’d bet I could go from unboxing to listening to music within a span of 10 minutes. ![]() I will always be fond of how easy Vizio makes it to set up soundbars. Vizio’s new $250 V-Series V51-H6 5.1 soundbar system is a bargain surround sound setup - even if it did take a few too many cost-saving measures this time around. Well, despite all of us living in the upside-down world that is the year 2020, at least that one thing has not changed.
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