To help us provide you with free impartial advice, we may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site. Learn more

Yamaha SR-C30A review: A little soundbar with big ambitions

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £299
inc VAT

Small but perfectly formed, the Yamaha SR-C30A is a diverting option for those who desire an unobtrusive upgrade to their TV sound

Pros

  • Extremely compact soundbar
  • Assertive, full-range sound
  • Ample control options

Cons

  • Lacks sonic scale
  • Sub and soundbar crossover issues
  • Worthwhile competition

If you want to upgrade the audio quality of a small TV without spending loads or buying a hulking great soundbar, the Yamaha SR-C30A is a budget soundbar that should definitely be on your radar.

As far as detail retrieval, low-frequency presence and mid-range positivity are concerned, the SR-C30A is a decisive step up from the sound your TV makes. And, like all Yamaha products, it’s properly made and finished. It has plenty of well-implemented control options and is so small you’ll hardly notice it’s there unless it’s powered up and working.

But a rather ham-fisted handover between soundbar and subwoofer, a predictably small-scale audio presentation and some very decent (although admittedly larger) alternatives mean it’s not a default choice.

Buy now from Peter Tyson


Yamaha SR-C30A review: What do you get for the money?

£299 put Yamaha’s way for the SR-C30A buys what looks very much like a scale model of a soundbar, accompanied by a wireless subwoofer that’s pretty small in absolute terms but is made to look rather hefty by the soundbar it accompanies. As the asking price strongly suggests, this is a functional product rather than one that’s going to indulge you with lavish materials or a metre-long feature set.

At 600 x 94 x 64mm (WDH), this is one of the most compact soundbars we’ve encountered, with only the Polk MagniFi Mini AX taking up less space on your TV stand. Those dimensions are exactly the same as 2021’s SR-C20A, but the SR-C30A is differentiated from its more affordable sibling by the inclusion of a wireless subwoofer.

The bar itself is small enough to sit beneath small TVs or gaming monitors without drawing visual attention to itself, and at 1.3kg it’s easy enough to take from room A (where the TV is) to room B (where the gaming monitor is). There are a couple of keyhole mounting points on the rear of the chassis, in case you want to hang it up rather than position it on a shelf.

The wireless subwoofer element of the system is a slightly less startling 160 x 364 x 335mm (WDH) but is still pretty compact and capable of delivering 50W of Class D power. It has a forward-firing bass reflex port, a side-firing 130mm bass driver and a pairing button in case it doesn’t automatically get acquainted with the soundbar when it’s first powered up.

The soundbar, naturally, has a bit more going on. It’s fitted with a pair of 46mm full-range drivers, each powered by 20W of Class D amplification – this is staunchly a 2.1-channel system with no ambitions beyond making the unassisted sound of your TV seem a bit feeble. There are physical connections on the rear panel: HDMI ARC, a couple of digital optical sockets, a 3.5mm analogue input and a USB slot that’s only for servicing. Wireless connectivity, meanwhile, is handled by Bluetooth 5.0, with SBC and AAC codec compatibility.

Build quality is perfectly acceptable, as are the materials Yamaha has deployed. Much of the soundbar is covered with acoustic cloth, and there’s more of the material over the front of the subwoofer as well as covering its side-firing driver. The rest of the soundbar is plastic, while the subwoofer is mostly chipboard. So functional is this system in the way it looks, in fact, that the glossy plastic trim around the sub’s reflex port almost counts as a design flourish.

Yamaha supplies a full-function remote control with the SR-C30A. Like the system itself, it’s not what you’d call a looker, but it gets the job done. It allows you to adjust overall volume, trim the subwoofer’s output independently, access four EQ presets – Stereo, Standard, 3D Movide and Game – as well as access “Clear Voice”, which pushes the mid-range forward in the name of intelligibility, and “Bass Ext”, which beefs up the low-end extension. You’re also able to cycle through the various inputs, mute the bar, power it off and adjust the brightness of the little row of LEDs behind the soundbar’s acoustic cloth on its front panel. These can be turned off altogether should you prefer.

All of these functions are duplicated on the Yamaha Sound Bar Remote Control app that’s available free for Android and iOS. It’s as staunchly unglamorous as the rest of the SR-C30A package, but it’s equally reliable and usable. And if you’re a particularly hands-on sort of person, power on/off, input selection and volume adjustment are available via capacitive touch controls on the soundbar’s top surface.

READ NEXT: Our favourite subwoofers

Yamaha SR-C30A review: What do we like about it?

In its primary task – sounding considerably more convincing than your average mainstream TV – the Yamaha SR-C30A performs admirably. There’s greater impetus to its sound, greater directness and positivity than a bog-standard television has a hope of delivering by itself, and the amount of low-frequency presence the Yamaha generates is utterly beyond any TV that doesn’t have a dedicated audio system of its own.

Throughout the frequency range, the SR-C30A retains and serves up plenty of detail; it’s attentive enough to keep on top of even the most minor, most transitory elements of a soundtrack and report back on them. When you remember that it has no dedicated tweeters, the high frequencies it generates are crisp, substantial and, yes, high – and the subwoofer has little difficulty delving deep into the bass regions and hitting with real determination. It’s no blunt instrument, though: it controls the attack and decay of individual sounds well, and carries just as much information regarding timbre and texture as the soundbar it accompanies.

This low-end authority leads to decent rhythmic expression when listening to music (or the musical elements of a movie soundtrack), and although the overall soundstage the Yamaha creates isn’t what you’d call expansive, it’s coherent. There’s just about enough breathing space for each individual thread of a soundtrack to do its thing without worrying about being crowded out.

It’s the mid-range, though, that’s probably the single most enjoyable aspect of the SR-C30A’s performance. Voices are loaded with fine detail of tone and texture, which means dialogue is characterful and distinct. The Yamaha projects dialogue well, so even when the going gets noisy, busy, or both, you’re never in any danger of losing access to voices, and the positivity of this presentation means it’s easy to follow what’s what even when listening at reasonably low volume levels.

READ NEXT: Best Dolby Atmos soundbar

Yamaha SR-C30A review: What could be improved?

Shortcomings are few here, but they exist. And primarily, they centre on the relationship between the soundbar and the subwoofer.

It becomes evident quite quickly that the soundbar doesn’t reach particularly far down the frequency range: the bottom of the mid-range is about the limit of its extension. This means the subwoofer has quite a lot of responsibility beyond the crashes, bangs and wallops that bass boxes normally restrict themselves to. And while it does its utmost, the crossover point between the subwoofer and the soundbar is always apparent, mostly because where they meet, their tonality is quite distinct. The soundbar is forward and direct, while the subwoofer is a little less positive and a little less upfront. So rather than a seamless journey from the top of the frequency range to the bottom, the line is a little bit bumpy.

It’s most apparent when you stream some music (or when your movie soundtrack becomes music-centric). Finessing the subwoofer’s volume level relative to the soundbar using the remote control or the app can mitigate this trait, but not eradicate it.

The other pertinent issue, which is of lower intensity but apparent nevertheless, concerns the straightforward scale of sound the SR-C30A produces: there’s just not that much of it. Perhaps it’s to be expected, given the small proportions of the system itself, but for all that it can create a persuasive soundstage, the Yamaha doesn’t sound any bigger than it looks. If you’re going to be using it in conjunction with a smaller TV or a gaming monitor, this is unlikely to be much of an issue, but beneath a larger screen or in a larger room, the sound will probably seem localised and a little confined.

Buy now from Peter Tyson


Yamaha SR-C30A: Should you buy it?

There’s an awful lot to like about the Yamaha SR-C30A. There’s the discreet, unshowy proportions, the quality of the build and finish, and the detailed, direct sound. It’s not without its issues, and it’s not without competition, but good luck finding a soundbar this small with such a big list of talents.

Read more

Reviews