Home Latest Yamaha MusicCast BAR 400 review: A $500 soundbar with multi-room audio, but no Dolby Atmos

Yamaha MusicCast BAR 400 review: A $500 soundbar with multi-room audio, but no Dolby Atmos

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Yamaha MusicCast BAR 400 review: A $500 soundbar with multi-room audio, but no Dolby Atmos

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The two-year-old Yamaha BAR 400 is one of the least expensive soundbars around to offer high-resolution multi-room audio support, but you’ll need to sacrifice other features—such as Dolby Atmos and a center channel—in the bargain.

This 2.1-channel model boasts support for Yamaha’s robust MultiCast multi-room audio platform and Apple’s AirPlay 2, and it serves up solid 2D movie audio and top-notch music performance. But the $500 MusicCast BAR 400 lacks native support for Dolby Atmos and DTS:X support, the two leading 3D audio formats that are fast becoming de rigueur in this price range, and its DTS Virtual:X mode sounds too harsh to be a viable substitute.

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With its $500 price tag and support for Yamaha’s high-resolution MusicCast multi-room audio system, the two-year-old Yamaha MusicCast BAR 400 is something of a throwback in Yamaha’s soundbar lineup. In the past couple of years, Yamaha has focused more on budget-priced DTS Virtual:X soundbars (think $350 or less), none of which support MusicCast. Indeed, Yamaha has only two other MusicCast-enabled soundbars available: the $1,200 YSP-2700, a four-year-old soundbar with an impressive 16 drivers but no 3D audio modes, and the five-year-old, $1,600 YSP-5600, a 46-driver (!) speaker that’s the only Yamaha soundbar to support Dolby Atmos and/or DTS:X. (A fourth Yamaha MusicCast soundbar, the YAS-706, has been discontinued.)

This review is part of TechHive’s coverage of the best soundbars, where you’ll find reviews of competing products, plus a buyer’s guide to the features you should consider when shopping in this category.

The Yamaha MusicCast BAR 400 is a 2.1-channel soundbar, with the left and right channels (the “2” in the BAR 400’s “2.1” designation) each powered by dual 1.25-inch woofers and a 1-inch tweeter, while the subwoofer (the “.1”) comes equipped with a 6.5-inch cone.

Because no drivers are devoted to the center channel, which is where dialog generally directed, the BAR 400 mixes audio from the left and right channels to create a “phantom” center channel. The problem with so-called phantom center channels is that voices sometimes leak into the left or right channels, causing a unnaturally echo-y sound that can grow tiring over time. I’ll cover the BAR 400’s real-world audio performance a little later in this review.

yamaha bar 400 detail Ben Patterson/IDG

The Yamama MusicCast BAR 400 comes with drivers for the left and right channels but none devoted to the center channel.

Thanks to MusicCast, you can upgrade the BAR 400 by adding either a pair of wireless MusicCast 20 ($230 each) or MusicCast 50 speakers ($500 each, ouch) as surround speakers, or you could group the BAR 400 with other MusicCast speakers in your home for multi-room audio goodness (more on that later). Yamaha supplied me with a pair of MusicCast 20 speakers for testing.

The MusicCast BAR 400 does not support native 3D audio formats such as Dolby Atmos or DTS:X, but it does support DTS Virtual:X, DTS’s virtualized 3D mode that uses sophisticated audio trickery to fool your ears into thinking they’re hearing immersive sound, complete with height effects and without the need for upfiring drivers. Yamaha has been a pioneer when it comes to DTS Virtual:X, with the $300 YAS-207 being the very first soundbar (which we quite liked, by the way) to support the format. But while DTS Virtual:X does an effective job at creating a convincing 3D soundstage with as little as two speaker channels, it can also add an unpleasant harshness to the sound.

Measuring 38.6 x 2.4 x 4.4 inches and weighing a reasonable six pounds, the MusicCast BAR 400’s main soundbar unit fit nicely in front of my 55-inch LG C9 OLED, a 4K TV with a particularly low-slung stand. (You can also mount the BAR 400 on a wall, as we’ll discuss shortly.) The 16.6 x 16 x 7.1-inch wireless subwoofer, meanwhile, is big, bulky, and heavy (21 pounds), which is par for the course when it comes to soundbar-bundled subwoofers.

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