Definitive Technology ProCinema 600 Speaker System


Performance
Build Quality
Value
Price: $699 (updated 1/28/15)
At A Glance: Exceptional sonic performance for the price • Coherent soundfield • Good fit for small rooms • Extreme volume can cause distortion • Lacks depth and punch of larger systems

The ProCinema 600 5.1 speaker system is small, compact, and unobtrusive, capable of blending into any environment. This sub-$1k system effortlessly provides a highly coherent surround field in a small room without degrading the sound quality, even at relatively high volumes. Using patented technology, the system delivers surprisingly good bass and midrange for a sat/sub system. Yes, it lacks the sheer depth, high impact, and fine details of more expensive systems with larger drivers and enclosures. But for basic home theaters in multi-purpose spaces, it not only gets the job done, it performs quite admirably for its size and cost.

Features
The ProCinema600 5.1 speaker system includes four small, matching speakers for the front left and right and surrounds plus a dedicated center and a 250W powered 8-inch subwoofer. The system employs Def Tech's exclusive Balanced Double Surround System (BDSS) technology, which combines active drivers with equal-sized pressure-coupled radiators. A single radiator is located on top of the satellites and two are placed on either side of the main drivers in the center-channel speaker. The matching radiator in the subwoofer is downward firing. This design effectively doubles the lower-midrange radiating area, improving low-frequency response. Additionally, a waveguide is used to flatten the overall frequency response and improve off-axis dispersion.

While extremely small, the satellite and center speaker enclosures feel sturdy and substantial in your hand and are fabricated with injection-molded mineral-filled polymer. The sleek, curved enclosures also reduce diffraction and provide increased rigidity to reduce resonance.

Ergonomics
The ProMonitor satellites and center speaker are wall-mountable, or they can sit on a shelf. However, Def Tech offers dedicated floor stands ($99/pair) that allow placement further from the wall for a more spacious and fuller soundfield, which I highly advise.

The satellites ship with a rubber-tipped tripod stand attached to the bottom for placing them on a shelf. (Just leave them attached when wall mounting.) Remove the center screw to take them off when using the ProCinema stands. The center speaker's enclosure is horizontally oriented and designed to rest in the perfect radiating position when placed on a TV stand or shelf.

The individual speakers are lightweight and can be held in one hand, and the enclosures are black with a high-gloss finish. They are curved toward the back of the enclosure, providing a small strip in the back for two speaker terminals that accommodate bare wire, spade lugs, or banana plugs. There are also holes for the wall mounting.

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Definitive Technology
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COMMENTS
iggypop70's picture

nice review but the pro cinema 800 system is a little bigger and I think would be better in a medium sized room. also, these speakers came out 6 years ago, why is home theater reviewing them now?

Scott Wilkinson's picture
We reviewed the DefTech ProCinema 600 system because it is currently a top-25 best seller on Amazon.com, BestBuy.com, and Crutchfield.com, and we want to see if the best selling products in various categories are worthy of that status. Unlike flat panels and Blu-ray players, speaker systems often remain in a manufacturer's line for many years. The ProCinema 800 is a best seller only on Crutchfield, which is why we chose the 600 to review.
jimremus's picture

Scott, in the article you mentioned that you made manual adjustments to get the mid-bass more to your liking. I recently purchased the Definitive Technology ProCinema 800, and have found similar issues with the mid-bass of those speakers as well. What exactly did you do to correct this? Was this a matter of manually setting the speaker sizes/levels to override the Audyssey settings, or did you actually go as far as to attenuate the treble?

alanmic's picture

I read this article. I think You put a great deal of exertion to make this article. I like your work. 642-467 vce

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