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It was very easy to set-up and adjust--two wires. It is not the same as having full surround sound, but as close as you can get with a single speaker. I checked out the Bose and Harmon Cardin and settled on this. I needed a replacement sound system but did not want the hassle of 5 speakers and cords running in my living room or worse yet drilling holes and monuting speakers. This is the ideal product for that. I feel I got the best product for my needs.
on some tvs the remote sensor could be covered by the bar, be sure and measure the height of your sensor. The Good: looks great with black piano finish easy setup with few wires simple operation excellent sound can be mounted or just place on enclosed cradle in front of tvThe Bad: not much surround sound, you will hear some sounds coming at you from the sides, but no rear sound detection. expensiveOverall: very good sound, easy setup and operation, would be hard to beat the quality of this if you want to avoid wires and other complications of a true 5.1 system.
I tried at least 10 times to speak live with a customer service support without success. I must mention, however, that the customer service is absolutely terrible. I went so far as to leave two messages at the Denon corporate office for the customer service manager and other executives, but never received a return call.
I'm not sure if it was the holiday rush or the fact that they want to sell only to dealers, but my experience was less than impressive. Bottom line, the product is good but don't plan for any support. The Denon DHT-FS3 is a great surround sound compliment to a small room that doesn't allow many speakers and wires.
The downside is it's a littly pricey. In addition, it's the perfect solution for a large plasma television. The sound enhancement is fantastic and the sleak design is impressive.
I was a first time and last time Denon customer with my purchase of the DHT-FS3.
While not Denon's fault, most every flat panel TV manufacturer puts the sensor for their remote control along the bottom of the TV, meaning if the Denon's sitting in front of the TV, I can just about guarantee it will be blocking the TV's remote sensor unless you're using it with a larger set (40" or more) and the sensor's in the corner, or your TV somewhat more intelligently placed the sensor along the TV's sides or top frame.I don't mean to come across as overly harsh, but I really had high hopes for a product like this from Denon, and sound-wise it really didn't sound as good as I thought it would. Unfortunately, while the Denon is the best sounding system of its type, it simply wasn't to be for my application.First, the size of the unit is a bit larger in some ways that one would expect and smaller than others. "SRS") or the similar Yamaha Sound Projectors.So in short, it's worth a try if you're looking for a product like this, but the fact that it would block my TV's IR sensor immediately made it a non-starter for me as soon as I removed it from its box. It can play in straight stereo, "wide" surround, Dolby Digital or even DTS, and all sound reasonably good for this application.The design flaw.
Perhaps in a future model Denon can thoughtfully provide an "IR blaster" on the back of the unit to automatically repeat IR signals it sees to any TV sensors that may be located behind it.It's truly a beautiful LOOKING unit, the piano black finish blending nicely with the similar finish used on most flat panels that don't use a silvery frame. The setup has many nice features, including distance to the listener, bass/treble (unlike Bose systems, but here the adjustments are in fairly large 2dB increments) and a nice universal remote to control your TV, DVD player and the speaker unit.
At no time will you think you're in front of not only a 5.1 surround system but even a decent stereo system using bookshelf loudspeakers; however it does sound better than any built-in TV speakers could, and it outdoes most "mini" systems as well, likely including offerings such as Denon's own S-101 HTIB system. That's not really their fault; you can only do so much with smaller drivers in a rather small enclosure.
But on the other hand, it does do a better job of producing a virtual surround effect than any TV's built-in surround effect (e.g. I purchased the DHT-FS3 hoping not so much for a 5.1 sound-alike experience but simply hoping for a good "TV speaker replacement" system.
Like most such systems, the bass is a bit "thumpy" - the sub just doesn't integrate well with the satellites and crosses over fairly high - around 125-150 Hz - so you never lose sight of the fact that most of your sound is coming from "up there" but the bass notes are coming from "down there."The unit has multiple inputs - two sets of RCAs for analog, including one set that can be used with one of Denon's iPod docks, two optical digital and one coaxial digital. Denon obviously designed the unit to fit in front of a flat screen TV, as they thoughtfully provided feet that are widely spaced (about 20") so that the unit can straddle the front of most TV manufacturer's flat screen pedestals.
But it's also wider than one might expect - it's wider than a 16:9 32" TV, but a bit narrower than a 37".The sound is GOOD, but not great. It's certainly a reasonable value for the price, given what it would cost to build a similar quality system for components or find as high quality a HTIB ("Home Theatre in a Box") system.However, for the sole reason that it blocks my TV's remote sensor, I've no alternate place to place it, and it neither has an IR blaster nor provision to drive one, it's back in its shipping box just about three hours after first opening it.
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