Skip to main content

Yamaha’s new 103 sound bar adds Bluetooth without a price hike

new yamaha 103 entry level sound bar adds bluetooth party yas103 image 2 edit
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Yamaha’s popular entry-level sound bar, the Yamaha 101, has been respectfully retired from service. Taking its place will be the upgraded model 103, slated for release later this month.

The principal upgrade to the 103 is the welcome addition of Bluetooth streaming for wireless music playback – something that is a near prerequisite in the increasingly competitive market of supplemental home theater solutions. With the addition of Bluetooth, the 103 will also be able to take advantage of Yamaha’s wireless streaming app, which allows for remote control of select features from your smartphone, and access to a bevy of adjustable parameters.

Recommended Videos

Internally, the 103 will be almost the exact same animal as its predecessor. Like the 101, it offers 7.1 virtual surround via Yamaha’s proprietary Air Surround Extreme DSP system, DTS and Dolby decoding, dual full-range drivers, and dual down-firing subwoofers in a ported reflex design that allows for powerful bass response without the need for a separate subwoofer.

The unit also carries its predecessor’s substantial selection of input options including dual-optical digital inputs, a coaxial digital input, and an analog input. Proving it’s still in the entry-level segment, the 103 doesn’t add ARC HDMI support, which allows for easy single-remote control from your TV remote, among other benefits. However, it does have the ability to learn select commands from your TV remote, and also sports an IR repeater to pass signal along to a TV’s infrared input if the bar gets in the way – something often reserved for mid-level sound bars and above.

The bar also supports Yamaha’s Univolume system, which lowers the effect of powerful changes in volume shifts from commercials, or loud action scenes.

Perhaps most importantly, the 103 holds onto one of the most appealing features of its forebear: a low price. At $300, it is an extremely affordable way to supplement the paltry sound of your flat screen’s audio.

You can take home a Yamaha 103 for your very own before the month is out.

Ryan Waniata
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ryan Waniata is a multi-year veteran of the digital media industry, a lover of all things tech, audio, and TV, and a…
Marshall’s latest Bluetooth speaker has four drivers for 360 sound
Marshall Middleton.

The Marshall Middleton ($299) is the company's latest addition to its lineup of guitar amp-inspired Bluetooth speakers, and it's available starting January 31 at marshallheadphones.com. The Middleton, as its name somewhat suggests, sits in the middle of the Marshall portable family -- it shares the same rectangular shape as the Emberton II but is heavier and more powerful than the Stockton II.

What makes the Middleton stand out is its unique quad-driver configuration, which places speakers on all four sides. There are two full-range drivers, each with its own 20-watt amplifier, and two tweeters, powered by a pair of 10-watt amps.  The Middleton uses the same "true stereophonic" system as the Emberton II to achieve what the company calls multidirectional, 360-degree stereo sound.

Read more
MQair is the new hi-res Bluetooth audio codec for fans of MQA
MQair codec logo.

Just when you thought it was safe to step back into the turbulent waters of Bluetooth audio, we have yet another Bluetooth codec to consider. In addition to SBC, AAC, LDAC, and the constantly expanding family of aptX codecs, you can now add MQair (em-kyoo-air).

MQair (known also by its technical label, SCL6) is the latest technology from MQA, the company founded by British audio pioneer Bob Stuart of Meridian Audio fame, and it has just been granted permission by the Japan Audio Society (JAS) to use the society's Hi-Res Audio Wireless logo. It's the third Bluetooth codec to receive the certification, the other two being LDAC and LHDC.

Read more
New leak hints at Sonos’ future: Bluetooth, spatial audio, and lots more home theater
Rendering of a reportedly unreleased Sonos speaker created by The Verge.

You have to imagine that Sonos CEO Patrick Spence is getting a little tired of leaks originating from within the company's walls. For the second time in 2022, The Verge's Chris Welch has published details of an unreleased and unconfirmed Sonos product that Welch claims is code-named Optimo 2. According to this information, which he claims was gleaned from work-in-progress images of the Optimo 2, it's a speaker that will likely take over from the current Sonos Five, a product that hasn't been meaningfully updated since it debuted as the Play:5 in 2009.

If the report is accurate -- and it's worth noting that Welch's prior reporting on the Sonos Ray ahead of that product's debut was very close to what was eventually announced -- the Optimo 2 could represent the beginning of a new era for Sonos. It reportedly contains the mics needed for Sonos Voice Control, as well as plenty of RAM for future updates. A wireframe render of the speaker created by The Verge (which is what you do when you need to protect the source material) illustrates an unusual mirror-image shape -- it looks vaguely like a VR headset -- which appears to be designed to direct sound outward in at least two directions -- forward and backward -- though Welch says that some of the Optimo 2's drivers will aim sound upward, too.

Read more