The touch-sensitive play/pause 'button' is integrated into the frame and flanked by two context-sensitive touch panels that you can use to control volume, if you use them at all. By default, these LEDs remain off most of the time and their brightness is tailored to the ambient light in the room even when they are lit (when adjusting volume, for example), so as not to appear too bright. The Arc's own status light consists of LEDs that shine through four holes above the subtle Sonos logo (fun fact: there are 76,000 holes in all the grilles combined). At least it could were it not for the integrated IR repeater, which is enabled by default and works flawlessly during testing. That's unlikely to be so high as to encroach on your TV's picture, but it could conceivably block the signals being sent to it by your remote control. The curvy design helps mask the Arc’s dimensions and makes it look svelte, but its height measurement of 8.5cm is not inconsiderable. Each end also features a grille-covered driver. Once in position, most of what you can see of the Arc is a 273-degree grille that hides the array of front-mounted and up-firing speakers. The bespoke Sonos wall mount is a £69 / $79 / AU$99 optional extra but there are also now plenty of third-party Arc wall mounts available for less. If you don't have a sideboard big enough to accommodate its sizeable width, the Arc can be wall-mounted, with onboard Trueplay tuning software automatically adjusting the speaker's frequency response accordingly. Voice control Amazon Alexa, Google Assistantĭimensions (hwd) 8.7 x 114 x 12cm / 3.4 x 45 x 4.5 inches Surround format support Dolby Atmos, Dolby True HD, Dolby Digital+, Dolby Digital, DTS
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