Sonos Ray review: Small size, big sound

The smallest, cheapest Sonos soundbar might lack some features but it packs a punch where it matters most
Written By
Published on 28 November 2022
Our rating
Reviewed price £279 inc VAT
Pros
  • Compact – will fit anywhere
  • Sounds amazing
  • TruePlay room tuning
Cons
  • Lacks voice control
  • Remote not included
  • No microphone

Think soundbar and something the size and shape of the Sonos Ray is probably not what immediately springs to mind. Youre probably imagining a long, slim bar that runs the full width of your TV, perhaps accompanied by a bulky subwoofer. Nevertheless, if youre in the market for a budget soundbar to improve your TVs audio output and do minimal damage to your bank account or clutter your bijou living room its definitely worth considering. For its size, its the best soundbar weve ever laid ears on.

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The Sonos Ray is the cheapest soundbar in the Sonos range at £279 and its also the smallest, measuring a mere 559 x 95 x 71mm (WDH) and weighing just under 2kg. Its nicely made, too, with Sonos signature minimalist design ethos to the fore. The Rays diminutive size means theres no display and controls are limited to three touch buttons on the top panel of the device, but theres no denying that it looks superb.Bells and whistles elsewhere are kept to a minimum, too. Audio inputs are limited to a single optical connection, theres no microphone, so it isnt possible to control it directly with your voice as you can with other Sonos soundbars, and Sonos doesnt even supply a remote control.

However, you do get Wi-Fi connectivity so you can stream music to the Ray directly from your smartphone. You can add the speaker to an existing Sonos multi-room setup as well.

The Ray also benefits from Sonos TruePlay technology, which allows you to tune the speaker to the room its situated in, to avoid room effects like over-boomy bass. Once youve connected the Ray to your TV, you simply wander around your living room waving your phone in the air while the Ray plays a series of test tones. Once thats done, the app sets up the EQ for the most balanced sound.

Just like the more expensive Sonos Beam and Arc soundbars, you can also upgrade the Ray at a later date by adding a couple of Sonos One units as left and right rear speakers (and a Sonos Sub if youre feeling particularly flush) for a surround sound setup.

In terms of hardware, the Ray isnt quite up to the level of the more expensive Sonos Beam but Sonos has clearly put plenty of thought into the design. Inside are four speaker drivers, each one backed by its own Class D digital amplifier. Two of these are mid-woofers, each one front-ported, and there are vanes inside the ports to reduce the effect of turbulence on the sound quality. There are also twin front-facing tweeters, each of which has a split wave-guide sat in front of it to spread the sound around your room and give it a sense of width.

This setup works superbly well; put simply, for a soundbar of this size, its nothing short of phenomenal. Theres more bass than something this tiny has any right to produce, mids are fleshed out and balanced and audio is clear and crisp in the upper registers, too. Theres even good instrument and voice separation, while the soundstage is uncannily wide no doubt thanks to those two wave-guides.

I did find the odd TV show and movie where I felt the dialogue lacked a little coherence but you can fix that easily enough by enabling Speech mode in the Sonos app. And, most importantly, I never had any issues with lipsync a problem I have experienced with HDMI-only soundbars like the Sonos Arc in the past.

Even the lack of remote control wasnt an issue as you can adjust the volume with your TVs infrared remote, or tweak it using the app. If your TV doesnt use an infrared remote, you can have the Ray learn the signals from any other IR remote you have lying around. I ended up setting it up to use the volume control on my Apple TV remote as both my Sky Q and Samsung TV zappers are Bluetooth based.

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Clearly, the Rays limited physical connectivity isnt brilliant and the fact that its optical-only means theres no support for higher-end audio formats, such as Dolby Atmos or DTS:X. Its also a little disappointing that theres no microphone for voice control or a remote supplied in the box.

However, Id argue that none of these issues are deal breakers, especially not considering how good the Sonos Ray sounds.

The size of the Ray also means that it isnt capable of shaking the room with rumbling explosions or throbbing bass. If you want that, there are plenty of products that will serve you better than the Sonos Ray the Polk Magnifi Mini, for instance, or the Sharp HT-SBW460 (assuming you don’t mind tweaking the bass by stuffing the bass port on the subwoofer).

However, if youre looking for a neat, one-box solution to your TV audio woes and dont want a hulking great soundbar and subwoofer to add to your living room setup, theres a lot to be said for the Sonos Ray.

Its small and neat, looks elegant and sounds amazingly good for its size, plus its upgradeable further down the track if you end up hankering after surround sound. Dont be put off by its size: at this price, the Sonos Ray is one of the best soundbars around.

Written by

Head of reviews at Expert Reviews, Jon has been testing and writing about products since before most of you were born (well, only if you were born after 1996). In that time he’s tested and reviewed hundreds of laptops, PCs, smartphones, vacuum cleaners, coffee machines, doorbells, cameras and more. He’s worked on websites since the early days of tech, writing game reviews for AOL and hardware reviews for PC Pro, Computer Buyer and other print publications. He’s also had work published in Trusted Reviews, Computing Which? and The Observer. And yet, even after so many years in the industry, there’s still nothing more he loves than getting to grips with a new product and putting it through its paces.

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