In 2 Minutes
- Why at all: Built-in projector speakers sound like a portable radio at 100 inches. Sound is 50% of the cinema experience.
- Soundbar is enough: In 9 out of 10 living rooms, a good soundbar beats a half-hearted 5.1 system.
- Connection: HDMI ARC = gold standard. Bluetooth works, but can cause lip-sync issues.
- Placement: Directly below or above the screen — never behind you.
You're sitting in front of your 120-inch screen, the movie's playing in 1080p — and the explosion sounds like a recess whistle from the projector. Sound is half the cinema experience. In 5 minutes you'll know why a soundbar is the better choice in most cases than a complete surround system.
Why the built-in projector speaker isn't enough
Technically, projector speakers are mini drivers with 3–5 watts. That's enough to make speech intelligible — not enough to separate dialogue, music, and effects simultaneously. With a 100-inch image, the visual experience is cinema — but the sound feels like a kitchen radio. This mismatch kills immersion faster than any image flaw.
Soundbar vs. Surround System: What's actually better
| Criterion | Soundbar | 5.1 Surround |
|---|---|---|
| Effort | One box, 1 cable | 5+ boxes, wiring |
| Price | from €45–300 | from €400 |
| Living Room Friendly | Yes | Only with dedicated room |
| Sound Wow Factor | 85% of the result | 100% — in the perfect room |
| For whom | Most households | True cinephiles with dedicated cinema room |
The hard truth: In a normal living room with your couch against the wall, a 5.1 system offers barely noticeable advantage — because the rear speakers are in the wrong spot. A good soundbar delivers 85% of the impact with 15% of the effort.
Driver count matters
Focus less on the brand, more on the number and size of drivers. A soundbar with 4 drivers (2 woofers, 2 tweeters) and integrated Bluetooth module sounds better than a 6-driver system from a no-name manufacturer. Guideline: from €45–150 you're in the range where the jump to the next price tier becomes marginal.
Placement: Below or above the screen
The soundbar belongs near the screen — not on the rear wall, not to the side. Two options:
- Directly below the screen: On a sideboard or shelf, angled slightly forward. The sound seems to come from the image.
- Above the screen: Wall-mounted if there's no space below. Make sure the projection cone isn't blocked.
Connection: HDMI ARC, Toslink, or Bluetooth?
- HDMI ARC (Audio Return Channel): The gold standard. One cable, both directions, no latency. Only works if both projector and soundbar support HDMI ARC.
- Optical Toslink: Fallback if no ARC. Stable, latency-free, no Dolby Atmos.
- 3.5 mm AUX: Universal, but analog. Okay for simple setups.
- Bluetooth: Convenient, but potentially with lip-sync lag. Only if cables aren't an option.
Subwoofer: When the extra step is worth it
A subwoofer complements frequencies below 60 Hz — that's the physical bass layer. If you're watching action films, sci-fi, or music with real depth, a wireless sub is worth it. For dialogue-heavy films, news, or sports, the soundbar alone is enough. No need to panic-buy a sub.
Bottom line: Your next step
Good soundbar plus Full HD projector = 90% cinema experience for under €250. We often pair the CINEMAX Bar and our other audio solutions with the PIXORA One or PIXORA Max — and we get the best feedback that way.
We've tested it ourselves: the jump from built-in projector sound to a budget soundbar is the biggest sound leap you can get for under €50. Everything after that is fine-tuning.
Fits the topic
CINEMAX Bar Soundbar
4 drivers · Bluetooth & AUX · mic input · from €44.99
Read more from this cluster
Hands-on recommendation
Soundbar and Bluetooth speakers for your setup