Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Peak power | 80 W Best: Devialet Phantom Peak power: 4500 W | |||
Weight | 5098.38 g Best: Philips BT2650 Weight: 0.21 g |
Low frequency | 45.0 Hz |
---|---|
High frequency | 22.0 kHz |
Peak power | 80.0 W |
Supported formats | MP3 |
Height | 7.28 in |
---|---|
Width | 13.78 in |
Depth | 7.28 in |
Weight | 179.84 oz |
Docking station for mobile/Tablet | no |
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Radio receiver | no |
Smart speaker (virtual assistant) | no |
Colour of product |
|
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USB | no |
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Other connectors |
|
Bluetooth | yes |
Bluetooth codec | aptX |
Bluetooth version | 4.1 |
Analogue 3.5mm input (Aux) | 1 |
Wireless network (Wi-Fi) | no |
Battery operated | no |
---|---|
Electric (not USB) | yes |
The Marshall Stanmore II is a good all-around performer, matching or surpassing the scores of much more expensive wireless speakers in our rankings.
The Marshall Stanmore II Bluetooth speaker delivers strong audio, but its price feels a bit high for the overall experience it delivers.
Marshall is known for their amazing guitar amps and speakers and are looking to dominate the market with the Marshall Stanmore II Bluetooth speaker.
For those who are about to rock, the Stanmore II has just about everything you need--as long as you don’t mind spending a big chunk of money.
The Marshall Stanmore multi-room speaker wants to be your go-to option for home audio. But how does it sound? And is it worth the $450 asking price?
The sound quality is fairly good overall, especially with rock music, but I had several problems with its operation.