Polk Audio LC265i-IP In-Wall IP Speaker System

You can't rush a good thing, and some things just aren't ready until they're ready. With electronics, coming to market too early usually means a product that's lacking in features, full of bugs, and short on performance.

What We Think
You get freestanding-speaker sound with an in-wall footprint from Polk's forward-looking IP speakers, but it's gonna cost you.
Polk Audio wasn't going to make that mistake with its cutting-edge IP (Internet protocol) speaker, which has had one of the longest development cycles of any audio product in recent memory. It was September 2003 when Polk and NetStreams - a company developing an entirely IP-based audio distribution system - first announced they'd work together on a "future product design." The Polk Audio LC265i-IP, touted as the world's first IP-addressable speaker, was introduced to the press a year later. It promised to take a streaming digital audio signal from NetStreams' DigiLinX system or other future products and turn it into pristine, audiophile-quality sound. Since then, Polk has demo'd the speaker several times at trade shows, but never delivered. That is, until now...

SETUP I've never before installed a pair of speakers and thought, "Man, I hope this works." But the LC265i-IPs are no ordinary speakers, and installing them is more like adding a device to your home network.

In-wall speakers should be auditioned in walls, and Polk obliged by sending pre-built wall sections made from framing and sheetrock. For the best sound - that is, tighter low- and mid-bass - and to eliminate rattles, Polk installed its Performance Enclosures (55.6 x 14 x 3.4 inches, $250 each). Unless you plan on some massive drywall repair, these enclosures should be installed during new construction.

The Polks are self-amplified and can function in a traditional audio system. They have RCA line-level inputs that accept the stereo output from your receiver's pre-outs or mulitzone output. Both left and right signals go to one speaker designated as the "control" by flipping three dip switches on the speaker's back. Cat-5 cabling links the two speakers together.

Since both speakers are triamplified (200 watts total: 100 watts to the woofer, 75 watts to the midrange driver, and 25 watts to the tweeter), they also need power, which is carried over a 4-conductor wire running back to a Polk Audio SPS-1 power supply ($700).

ARTICLE CONTENTS

COMMENTS
larrymartin's picture

The concept of maintaining a full-bandwidth digital signal up to the power amplifiers for pure fidelity is intriguing. The independent control through a web browser adds a level of convenience.
Fence Decking Supplier in Doylestown PA

X