Klipsch HD Theater 500 review

We audition another horn-based, 5.1 compact speaker system and think it's money well spent

Klipsch HD Theatre 500

TechRadar Verdict

If you're looking to build an affordable surround sound setup with more quality than an all-in-one system, then partner this with an entry-level AVR and enjoy

Pros

  • +

    Good detail and projection

  • +

    solid, well extended bass

Cons

  • -

    Slightly rough and edgy horn tweeters don't deliver high-quality audio reproduction

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The popularity of this type of compact speaker package has mostly been driven by the switch from CRTs to flatscreen TVs.

For, while the case for flatscreen TVs is overwhelming on most counts, sound quality has suffered because even large flatpanels don't lend themselves to good acoustic design.

Klipsch hd theatre 500

Throbbing gristle

Finally, the subwoofer is a perfectly conventional active design, based on a small diameter bass unit, and a rather lightweight enclosure, which you can feel thrumming away through your fingertips. Adjustments are available for frequency coverage (low pass filter) level and phase reversal which provide the standard set of sound tweaking options.

On the whole it works well with some minor caveats. Sound quality is bold and outgoing for home cinema material, although I wouldn't trust it with an audiophile music collection, and the subwoofer is an excellent match to the rest of the system and is arguably its high point.

It has real muscle and moderately impressive depth and weight, if you take care to optimise the control settings and use some restraint. This one has the tautness and discipline necessary to make a good, seamless extension to the coverage of the satellites and so it matches the system well.

The satellites perform solidly near the crossover region to the sub, and this helps produce an impressively seamless join.

Don't expect true high-octane results, especially with soundtracks rich in dramatic effects, but it works commendably with more mainstream, and (dare I say) naturalistic material. Higher up the frequency band, the system begins to show some signs of weaknesses.

Klipsch is not demanding of amp power with its horn tweeters, and there is no shortage of treble output if you're sitting close to the main tweeter axis, but there is a trace of hardness and aggression here, too.

The Klipsch system has some excellent positive qualities, such as its consistent and even transitions across the sound stage and from front to back. The additional bass driver gives the centre channel more clout, too. The system also offers first-rate vocal intelligibility, which should come as a real relief to many users of flatscreen tellies.

For reasons best known to Klipsch, this package is described as HD Theater, transparently cashing in on the current preference for HD video. But don't be fooled; there is nothing remotely high-def about this system, unless you count the sometimes overcooked treble that helps emphasise fine detail (but not always in a good way).

But the Klipsch HD Theater 500 has plenty going for it. The speakers are relatively small, discreet and well built (the cheapskate use of spring terminals aside), and the system is also intelligible, detailed and open-sounding. If you're looking to build an affordable surround sound setup with more quality than an all-in-one system, then partner this with an entry-level AVR and enjoy