The Sonos Roam is the Swiss Army Knife of speakers with multi-room, Bluetooth and smart features inside a compact design that'll follow wherever you go.
Should I Buy The Sonos Roam?
Pros
- Excellent sound
- Thoughtful IP67 design
- Lots of smart features
- Wireless charging
Cons
- Bluetooth limited to streaming
- Battery life behind rivals
Our Verdict
Price When Reviewed
- $169
The first new Sonos speaker of the year is the firm’s smallest, cheapest and smartest yet. Here’s our full Sonos Roam review.
The Roam is a truly portable Bluetooth speaker that still works over Wi-Fi in the home as part of a wider Sonos system. It follows the Sonos Move, which was the firm’s first Bluetooth speaker. But the Move's 3kg weight and bulky size mean it’s not the easiest thing to take away from the home and garden.
Well, the Roam fixes that problem and brings other features to the table, such as wireless charging, making this speaker more accessible. It puts Sonos in more direct competition with the likes of Bose, Sony and UE.
Design & Build
In the world of Sonos, the Roam is tiny. It’s just 1/6th the size of its big brother, the Move, standing at 168mm tall and weighing only 430g.
The Roam doesn’t have to stand on its end, but this is the orientation that makes the most sense. It takes up less space and the buttons are on the end so it’s a lot easier to use them. Furthermore, the wireless charging is on the opposite end - I’ll talk about this more later.
The rubbery ends are grippy and concave to avoid accidental button pushes and the buttons are traditional rather than touch-sensitive. One extra button on the back is for power and manually switching to Bluetooth.
As the Roam lacks the usual join button found on other Sonos speakers, the setup process is a little different. It takes longer, but the app guides you through it no problem.
The LED next to the microphone indicates its status but there are two further LEDs on the front, making things a little confusing. The one by the Sonos logo is a status light for connection, mute and errors while the one at the other end is dedicated to power and charge.
The shape makes it easy and comfortable to pick up and should help it avoid rolling over if you put it on its side. There are also four little rubber feet for this orientation. Sonos has improved the durability compared to the Move, upping the IP rating from IP56 to IP67.
Sound Quality & Features
Inside the Roam is a 'custom racetrack' mid-range driver, along with a tweeter. These are powered by two Class-H amps and as usual, Sonos doesn’t state specs like a frequency range or similar.
The important thing is that the Roam sounds great, offering much better sound quality than you’d expect for a speaker of its size.
The amount of warm, rich bass the Roam is capable of producing is astonishing and it’ll fill an average UK living room without breaking 50% volume level. It’s also decent outdoors, projecting well, although the Move is more suited for this, especially if you’re having a big party.
While the bass does slightly dominate, the mid-range is still true to form and there’s enough top-end treble to keep things well-rounded.
If you don’t find that the Roam suits the music or other audio you’re playing through it, you can always adjust the bass and treble levels in the Sonos app.
There's a new feature called Sound Swap. When you’re at home (and have other Sonos speakers), you can long-press the play button on the Roam and the music will automatically transfer to the nearest speaker. You can also do the reverse and pull it from a speaker if you’re, for example, heading out into the garden.
It works very well and feels a little magical, although there can be a slight delay for the music to move.
The exception is that Siri works when using AirPlay 2 but it’s a shame you can’t use your phone’s data connection for digital assistants or even hands-free calls. This is possible because the B&O Beosound A1 (2nd-gen) can do both.
It pretty much goes without saying but just in case, the Roam can’t be used as rear surround speakers with a Sonos soundbar. Nor can it be used with a Sub.
Battery Life & Charging
Despite being so much smaller than the Move and having a battery half the capacity (18Wh), Sonos has still managed to offer up to 10 hours of battery life from the Roam; that’s only one hour less than its bigger brother.
While you’ll get a good amount of playtime, rivals do offer a lot longer, with some lasting more than twice as many hours.
When it comes to charging, the Roam doesn’t come with a base like the Move. Instead, it has a USB-C port on the back with up to 15W charging. Only a cable is supplied in the box.
I haven’t tested it, but it’ll be really useful if you don’t already have a compatible wireless charger. It’s a little pricey at £44/US$49 considering it offers 0-50% charge in two hours, so a cheaper one for your desk/bedside table that’ll also be good for your phone might be a better choice.
Find a wireless charger here.
Price
The Sonos Roam is priced at £159 or US$169 which means it’s a lot cheaper than the £399 Move and is now the cheapest Sonos speaker you can buy – the One SL is £179.
You can buy it from Sonos or John Lewis in the UK. The official store offers a two-pack but with no discount.
In the Bluetooth speaker market, it sits in between rivals such as the £129 Marshall Emberton and £179 Bose SoundLink Revolve II. Then the B&O’s Beosound A1 (Gen 2) is even more at £200.
It’s an impressive price point considering this is far more than just a Bluetooth speaker. You can check out our best Bluetooth speakers chart to see how it stacks up against rivals.
Verdict
Overall, Sonos has done a great job with the Roam by offering something far more compact and cheaper than the Move.
Even as a straight Bluetooth speaker it fares well against rivals on design, price and sound quality.
However, you're going to need to use the Roam on Wi-Fi at home as well to fully make the most of it. And ideally with other Sonos speakers, too.
In this situation, it's the most well-rounded and versatile speaker I've ever tested. You could arguably fill your house with Roams plugged into cheap chargers to create an affordable Sonos multi-room setup.
It's stylish, compact and has a clever multi-orientation design that's also IP67. Add things like wireless charging and Sonos exclusive features like Sound Swap and it can do more than rivals.
Really, the only complaints I have relate to battery life, only because rivals last longer, and the way Bluetooth is limited to streaming despite the possibility of doing more - like using it for calls or your phone's digital assistant.
Specs
- 2x Class-H digital amplifiers
- 1x mid-woofer
- 1x tweeter
- Quad-core 1.4GHz A-53 processor
- 1GB SDRAM
- Dual-band 802.11b/g/n/ac Wi-Fi
- Bluetooth 5.0
- Apple AirPlay 2 (iOS 11.4 and higher)
- 18Wh battery, 10 hours per charge
- USB-C port 15W (for charging)
- Wireless charging (Qi-certified)
- Far field mic array
- Google Assistant or Amazon Alexa
- 5x buttons - playback, volume up, volume down, mic, power/Bluetooth
- 3x LED
- IP67
- 168 x 62 x 60mm
- 430g
- Shadow Black, Lunar White
0 comments:
Post a Comment