Sonos debuts Dolby Atmos Arc soundbar, updated Sub & Five, all with AirPlay 2 & HomeKit

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in General Discussion edited May 2020
Sonos has a lineup of new products and refreshes that fulfill long-asked customer requests, including the all-new Sonos Arc soundbar, the updated and renamed Sonos Five, and the third-generation Sonos Sub.

Sonos Arc with Sub (Gen 3) and two Sonos SLs
Sonos Arc with Sub (Gen 3) and two Sonos SLs

Sonos Arc

Sonos Arc is a new premium soundbar offering from the speaker-maker, aimed to those who are looking for something more powerful than the Sonos Beam. It will replace the Playbar and Playbase in the lineup.






It is larger than Sonos' other soundbars and packs eleven drivers for multi-directional sound including support for Dolby Atmos. That is aided by the curved grille that is front and center of the Arc.

Sonos Arc in white
Sonos Arc in white


The grille is one large piece of curved plastic drilled with more than 76,000 individual holes. A status light on the top of the grille will automatically dim when the room is dim so you can keep the focus on your content.

As the Arc is designed for TV and movies, it has a strong focus on clear dialogue and, like the Beam, can boost dialogue clarity and quiet louder sounds. The center channels are dedicated to dialogue, left and right front channels aid in providing a wide soundstage, while sideways-facing surrounds and upwards facing channels offer more sound immersion and support for Dolby Atmos.

Exploded view of Sonos Arc
Exploded view of Sonos Arc


When the upward channels aren't being used for Dolby Atmos, they are repurposed to provide additional lower frequencies.

Like the Beam, Arc connects seamlessly via HDMI eARC or ARC though an optical adapter is included as well for TVs that don't support an audio return channel. It also clearly denotes when Dolby Atmos is active.

Arc can detect when it is mounted to temper bass resonance. It can be tuned using Sonos' TruePlay technology and is able to detect the walls in the room to adjust the device so that no matter the shape of the room audio will hit your ears at the precise time. For instance, if you have one wall to your right very close, it will delay that audio because the left audio takes longer to travel and bounce back and thus hits both your left and right ears simultaneously.

As Sonos is a modular system, it is easy to increase your home theater setup. In addition to the Sonos Sub, two additional Sonos speakers can be paired as rear speakers for better surround sounds.

When a Sonos Sub is paired, the Arc will drastically cut back on its own bass to rely on the sub, freeing up more bandwidth for the speaker to improve the mids and dialogue.

Sonos Arc supports Dolby Atmos
Sonos Arc supports Dolby Atmos


Sonos Arc supports Apple's AirPlay 2 and HomeKit, just as with other Sonos speakers. This means you can cast audio from any Apple device wirelessly to the speaker, or control and automate it via the Home app.

For those using other ecosystems, there is a microphone on board and the ability to use the speaker for Amazon Alexa, or Google Assistant. This is not a requirement for use, however.

Sonos Arc is available for preorder now from Sonos, as well as at Adorama, Amazon and B&H Photo. It's launching June 10 for $799 in both white and black colorways.

The new Sonos Sub

The third generation Sonos Sub retains the same exterior stylings but has updated internals. There is now increased memory and a faster processor in the new model, as well as updated wireless radios. Sub also now has far better Wi-Fi performance than previous generations.

Sonos Sub (Gen 3) in white
Sonos Sub (Gen 3) in white


The updated Sonos Sub (Gen 3) can be preordered now from Sonos, as well as at B&H, Adorama and Amazon, and will be available June 10 for $699.

Sonos Five

Sonos Five is the latest generation of the Sonos Play:5. It keeps the same impressive audio but adds additional memory, better wireless performance, and increased processing power, similar to the boosts given to the Sonos Sub.

The new Sonos Five in all white
The new Sonos Five in all white


It has been updated in an all-black design as well as a -- for the first time -- all-white design.

Sonos Five is available to preorder from Sonos now and ships June 10 for $499. Amazon, Adorama and B&H are all accepting pre-orders too.

Sonos S2 app

Arc, Five, and Sub (Gen 3) will all run exclusively on the updated Sonos S2 app. We previewed the app when Sonos announced the transition in March 2020.

Updated Sonos app
Updated Sonos app


The app has an improved user experience and finally delivers saved room groups. It will cut off support for certain older speakers but paves the way for higher resolution audio including Dolby Atmos as we see with Arc.

Sonos will release the new app on June 8th.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 9
    entropysentropys Posts: 4,348member
    Niiiiiice!
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  • Reply 2 of 9
    Fatmanfatman Posts: 513member
    Almost well thought out. Sounds like it has one HDMI, so if you have a cable box, HDMI streamer, video game system, disc player, etc. you would need to route all of those into your TV's various HDMI ports - so still it can't replace a dedicated AV receiver.  Also if you do not have a TV with eARC, this is not for you.
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  • Reply 3 of 9
    Andrew_OSUandrew_osu Posts: 575member, editor
    Fatman said:
    Almost well thought out. Sounds like it has one HDMI, so if you have a cable box, HDMI streamer, video game system, disc player, etc. you would need to route all of those into your TV's various HDMI ports - so still it can't replace a dedicated AV receiver.  Also if you do not have a TV with eARC, this is not for you.

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  • Reply 4 of 9
    I currently have the Playbar, sub and Play 3 setup. Can I just replace the Playbar with the Arc? Will it work and group with the old Sub and the 3? Doesn’t sound like it. 

    What about the S2 app? Will I have to keep the old app for the old equipment? And get the S2 for the new?
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  • Reply 5 of 9
    I currently have the Playbar, sub and Play 3 setup. Can I just replace the Playbar with the Arc? Will it work and group with the old Sub and the 3? Doesn’t sound like it. 

    What about the S2 app? Will I have to keep the old app for the old equipment? And get the S2 for the new?
    The Playbar, Sub, and 3 are all S2 compatable so they will need to be updated on June 8 to work with the Arc which ships with S2. Only legacy devices like Play5 gen1, Connect:Amp, pre 2015 Connect do not have enough memory to support S2. Go to Sonos website, login and click upgrade. If any of your products are considered legacy, it will tell you, and offer you 30% off credit to your account. 
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  • Reply 6 of 9
    Andrew_OSUandrew_osu Posts: 575member, editor
    I currently have the Playbar, sub and Play 3 setup. Can I just replace the Playbar with the Arc? Will it work and group with the old Sub and the 3? Doesn’t sound like it. 

    What about the S2 app? Will I have to keep the old app for the old equipment? And get the S2 for the new?
    Good questions and we will be sure to make sure this is clear as we produce our review.

    Almost all speakers will be upgraded to support the new S2 app. See which aren’t supported here. You will have to update all of your devices to support the S2 app on June 8 and then if you choose to pick up the Arc (you totally should), you will just ungroup those devices and then pair them with the new soundbar. So in short, yes. All of your existing rear speakers and the sub will work with the Arc.
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  • Reply 7 of 9
    polymniapolymnia Posts: 1,080member
    Fatman said:
    Almost well thought out. Sounds like it has one HDMI, so if you have a cable box, HDMI streamer, video game system, disc player, etc. you would need to route all of those into your TV's various HDMI ports - so still it can't replace a dedicated AV receiver.  Also if you do not have a TV with eARC, this is not for you.
    As a guy with a really nice AV receiver and a big surround speaker system, I don’t understand why I’d WANT to replace that with this device. I’m also a big Sonos fan, but I don’t see the AV receiver and the Arc as mutually exclusive. I use a Connect to pipe my Sonos system into my AV receiver. 

    Use the AV receiver with fancy speakers in a theater room and this Arc in a bedroom or other secondary location. 
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  • Reply 8 of 9
    Andrew_OSUandrew_osu Posts: 575member, editor
    polymnia said:
    Fatman said:
    Almost well thought out. Sounds like it has one HDMI, so if you have a cable box, HDMI streamer, video game system, disc player, etc. you would need to route all of those into your TV's various HDMI ports - so still it can't replace a dedicated AV receiver.  Also if you do not have a TV with eARC, this is not for you.
    As a guy with a really nice AV receiver and a big surround speaker system, I don’t understand why I’d WANT to replace that with this device. I’m also a big Sonos fan, but I don’t see the AV receiver and the Arc as mutually exclusive. I use a Connect to pipe my Sonos system into my AV receiver. 

    Use the AV receiver with fancy speakers in a theater room and this Arc in a bedroom or other secondary location. 
    Love this. For me, I can’t do a whole surround sound and receiver. Too small space and no where to run wires. But that setup is clearly better than a single soundbar. Especially if you have real ceiling mounted speakers for Atmos. But this would be incredible for a bedroom or other living space where you want great sound but don’t want to run a whole surround sound system and receiver. 
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 9 of 9
    polymniapolymnia Posts: 1,080member
    polymnia said:
    Fatman said:
    Almost well thought out. Sounds like it has one HDMI, so if you have a cable box, HDMI streamer, video game system, disc player, etc. you would need to route all of those into your TV's various HDMI ports - so still it can't replace a dedicated AV receiver.  Also if you do not have a TV with eARC, this is not for you.
    As a guy with a really nice AV receiver and a big surround speaker system, I don’t understand why I’d WANT to replace that with this device. I’m also a big Sonos fan, but I don’t see the AV receiver and the Arc as mutually exclusive. I use a Connect to pipe my Sonos system into my AV receiver. 

    Use the AV receiver with fancy speakers in a theater room and this Arc in a bedroom or other secondary location. 
    Love this. For me, I can’t do a whole surround sound and receiver. Too small space and no where to run wires. But that setup is clearly better than a single soundbar. Especially if you have real ceiling mounted speakers for Atmos. But this would be incredible for a bedroom or other living space where you want great sound but don’t want to run a whole surround sound system and receiver. 
    I think the slice of people who need/want a component-based surround setup gets smaller all the time, even though I am one of the faithful. When I built my surround system, Sonos made no theater components. I’d be tempted to go all Sonos if I were starting from scratch today. But I wouldn’t switch from what I have now. 

    I’m really happy Sonos is addressing the lack of high res audio. I don’t have a ton of it (aside from movies), but when I do stream high res audio to my Connect via Plex, it is down sampled. I feel weird down sampling the audio stream that is fed to the best speakers in the house. Truly a first world problem, I know. 

    Edit: the time I spent running the wires is a MAJOR contributing reason to not abandon the receiver/speaker system. That was not easy! I also ran an RCA cable out to a more socially advantageous location (not to mention toddler-proofed) in the room for the turntable. Everything hidden in wall/ceiling/trim. That was a big project. Maybe a sunk cost fallacy? Anyway, I’m really happy with both my AV receiver & Sonos gear. 
    edited May 2020
    sedicivalvole
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