Altec Lansing Octane 7 review

Altec Lansing's Octane 7 speakers look intriguing but sound awful.
Written By
Published on 23 April 2010
Altec Lansing Octane 7
Our rating
Reviewed price £60 inc VAT

The Altec Lansing Octane 7 speakers look intriguing thanks to the unusually-shaped upright satellites. These are designed so that the drivers face downwards, bouncing the sound off the table they’re placed on. This allows music to be heard from anywhere in the room, rather than just directly in front of them, which should make them suitable for parties as well as for personal listening. This omni-directional effect worked well, but, unfortunately, audio quality was very disappointing.

The good news is that blues and jazz tracks sounded reasonably clear and undistorted, although they didn’t sound anywhere near as rich and warm as we would have liked. The bad news is that any music with any substantial amount of bass sounds irredeemably awful. The bass in our R&B and rock tracks distorted so badly that it made the tracks unlistenable. This can be partially compensated for by reducing the bass using the dials on the right satellite, but it doesn’t completely eliminate the distortion and makes bass-heavy tracks sound limp and less satisfying.

Even if the bass didn’t distort so heavily, rock and R&B music would still be unpleasant due to the harsh-sounding high end. Electronic music also suffered from the same pair of problems, although it wasn’t as noticeable. The distorted high end was very noticeable in our classical and acoustic folk tracks though, especially in pieces with string instruments.

We wanted to like the Octane 7 speakers due to their unique appearance, but there’s no way we can recommend them due to their appallingly bad sound quality, especially given that you can get some decent-sounding speakers at this price. If you want a set of 2.1 speakers capable of producing omni-directional sound go for Logitech’s Z523 2.1 speakers instead. They’re a bit more expensive (£75 from www.lambda-tek.com), but their audio quality is far superior.

Specifications
Rating *
Speaker configuration 2.1
RMS power output 31W
Power consumption standby 8W
Analogue inputs 3.5mm stereo
Digital inputs none
Dock connector none
Headphone output none
Satellite cable lengths 2.6m left, 2m right
Cable type captive
Controls located right satellite
Digital processing none
Tone controls bass and treble
Price £60
Supplier http://www.novatech.co.uk
Details www.alteclansing.co.uk

Written by

Alan Lu is currently external communications manager at Vodafone UK and has a background in corporate communications and media writing. An alumnus of The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), he has previously served as reviews editor for IT Pro and Computeractive.

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