Sony F200 review

This system's two-channel performance is excellent, but what about surround?

Sony F200
It might not manage real 5.1 surround, but there's lots to like about the Sony F200

TechRadar Verdict

A stylish and sleek system for basic audio to accompany your films, just don't expect anything too impressive surround sound-wise

Pros

  • +

    Slick user interface

  • +

    Elegant space-saving design

  • +

    Excellent stereo performance

  • +

    Writes to USB

Cons

  • -

    No real surround effect

  • -

    Sounds overly processed

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Sony's 2.1-channel solution looks effortlessly classy behind its cool glass fascia.

The secret of its slim size lies with the massive S-Master sub that takes care of all the amplification and cabling, leaving just a sleek DVD player and dinky speakers on show.

Superior user-friendliness

The upright design saves table space and provides easy access to the slot-loading DVD player on one side and USB Host port on the other.

The disc-spinner is compatible with most audio and video formats, although not Sony's own Super Audio CD, and the USB port can record as well as play. Unlike the fancy LED displays on some of its rivals, this one is quite calm, with just track info and a clock displayed most of the time.

The onscreen display is more impressive, making use of Sony's legendary easy-to-use GUI. A decent remote control helps the F200 win full marks for user-friendliness.

Setup is straightforward, with colour-coded cables running to the sub and an HDMI lead to the TV. From this you get pin-sharp pictures from the DVD in standard-def 576p mode and even better results when you upscale to 720p. It'll go all the way to 1080p, in fact, and there's no grain or video noise at all here, just vivid pictures.

Stereophile system

Put on a CD like Paul Weller's Changing Man and the worryingly slim desktop speakers manage to pull a remarkably broad and descriptive sound out of the bag. The stereo soundstage projects well and is superbly sweet and open in the higher frequencies.

It's a similar story with DVD in stereo, too; atmospheric music and crisp dialogue. But the F200 falls flat in surround mode. Sony uses a 'virtual' system to conjure up the illusion of rear speakers, but it doesn't really work.

It sounds overly processed and makes the sub bass seem disembodied from the two
speakers. I soon found myself switching back to stereo mode and being content with the wide two-channel soundstage.

Unconvincing surround sound

It might not manage real 5.1 surround, but there's lots to like about the Sony F200. It's classier than Keira Knightley and just as thin, and CDs sound great.

The user interface is slick too, so you'll actually enjoy putting discs in. It just doesn't pull off a convincing 5.1 surround soundtrack with its two skinny speakers. It seems you can't have everything.

Jim Hill

Jim is a seasoned expert when it comes to testing tech. From playing a prototype PlayStation One to meeting a man called Steve about a new kind of phone in 2007, he’s always hunting the next big thing at the bleeding edge of the electronics industry. After editing the tech section of Wired UK magazine, he is currently specialising in IT and voyaging in his VW camper van.