Poor | Average | Good | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Peak power | 80 W Best: Devialet Phantom Peak power: 4500 W | |||
Weight | 4749.11 g Best: Philips BT2650 Weight: 0.21 g |
Low frequency | 50.0 Hz |
---|---|
High frequency | 20.0 kHz |
Peak power | 80.0 W |
Height | 7.28 in |
---|---|
Width | 13.78 in |
Depth | 7.28 in |
Weight | 167.52 oz |
Docking station for mobile/Tablet | no |
---|---|
Radio receiver | no |
Type of radio |
|
Smart speaker (virtual assistant) | no |
Streaming standards |
|
Colour of product |
|
---|
USB | no |
---|---|
Other connectors | RCA stereo input |
Source of connection |
|
Bluetooth | yes |
Wired inputs |
|
Bluetooth version | 4.2 |
Analogue 3.5mm input (Aux) | 1 |
Wireless network (Wi-Fi) | yes |
Battery operated | no |
---|---|
Electric (not USB) | yes |
An iconically designed, and very loud, multi-room speaker
The sound quality is fairly good overall, especially with rock music, but I had several problems with its operation.
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?
AppleInsider checks out Marshall's Stanmore and Action multi-room speakers to test out if they are solid options for the wireless speaker fan, even if they only support only the original AirPlay.
The Marshall Stanmore II is a good all-around performer, matching or surpassing the scores of much more expensive wireless speakers in our rankings.
Until now, if you wanted a smart speaker that didn’t make a dog’s dinner of playing your Spotify Discover Weekly playlist, the Sonos One was the obvious pur...
Marshall's Stanmore II Voice smart speaker improves upon the already-solid audio of the Stanmore II Bluetooth while adding your choice of Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant voice control to the mix.