LG BH6220S review

Good value all-in-one, but it lacks connectivity and adjustment settings
Written By
Published on 9 August 2012
Our rating
Reviewed price £200 inc VAT

LG’s BH6220S is a little more wallet-friendly than some all-in-one home cinema packages. It only costs £199, but it comes with plenty of the features we expect to see in a more expensive system, including smart TV functions, a set of 5.1 surround sound speakers and USB and network multimedia playback.

LG BH6220S

The main unit is a little narrower than other Blu-ray players, but it’s still big enough to sit directly under a big-screen TV. From the front, the single-line LCD display provides basic playback information, along with a USB port and a 3.5mm auxiliary input hidden beneath the disc tray.

LG BH6220S

There’s not a whole lot of choice in terms of connectivity, because the BH6220S only has a single HDMI output. With no HDMI inputs, you won’t be able to connect a set-top box or games console directly to the speaker system. It doesn’t support Audio Return Channel (ARC) either, so you can’t use the speakers to watch Freeview using your TV’s integrated tuner. Still, you fall back to the digital optical audio input, but you’ll lose out on Dolby TrueHD and DTS Master Audio if you do. There’s one analogue audio input and one composite video output, but these are only useful for older devices.

The speaker wire connections on both the main units and the speakers themselves use spring terminals, so you can swap out the cable for longer lengths quickly and easily. The speakers themselves are about as tall as an average paperback and come with reversible stands that double as wall mounts. The centre speaker lies horizontally and the passive subwoofer’s fairly large considering the price of the system, although its shoebox dimensions should make it easy to hide behind a sofa if you wish.

LG BH6220S

Even before you start playing Blu-rays, there’s plenty of content waiting to be discovered in LG’s Smart TV portal. It doesn’t have integrated Wi-Fi, so you’ll need to run a cable to the Ethernet port in order to get online, but once you do you can catch up with missed BBC programs using iPlayer, stream on-demand movies from Netflix, LoveFilm or AceTrax and watch content from a host of smaller services. There’s also a Facebook app to you socially networked.

Multimedia playback was superb, either from a USB flash drive or over the local network. Indeed, we could play almost all our test videos, including MKV, DivX HD and Xvid files. The only exception was MOV files, which refused to play.

The whole experience is made much easier thanks to LG’s simple icon-based interface, which is bright and cheery. However, dig a little deeper and there aren’t many more advanced options to tweak, especially in terms of picture quality. What you see is very much what you get, so you must use your TV top change settings. It’s fairly responsive, but it lags behind some other all-in-ones we’ve used.

The BH6220S loads a Blu-ray in 11 seconds, so the BH6220S is certainly fast in that respect, but because it lacks a quick resume function you must navigate to the point at which you left a film manually. We had no trouble playing both 2D and 3D films, although you have no control over the type or strength of the 3D effect used. Three picture modes (standard, Vivid and Movie) let you tweak the image, along with a fourth user mode that gives you control over brightness, contrast, sharpness and colour. Unfortunately, these presets leave the picture far too dark and some detail is lost. DVD upscaling is fairly basic, having minimal edge smoothing and a significant amount of noise. Reducing image sharpness helps slightly.

LG BH6220S

In our testing, the BH6220S was just about loud enough to fill a small room, and it produced a very clear mid-range. At maximum volume, the high end became too sharp, but even the most explosive action sequences should stay free of distortion if you keep the volume below two thirds of maximum. At half volume, it was also considerably quieter than competing systems, which meant we had to increase the volume to compensate.

At its default setting, the subwoofer generally produced a small amount of bass and we only felt a lot of rumble during the most action-packed scenes. We also felt that the centre speaker was overly dominant, often drowning out detail from the front and rear satellites until we adjusted the levels.

Because it doesn’t have HDMI inputs, the BH6220S isn’t ideal for anyone looking to add surround sound to a games console or set-top box. It’s a competent Blu-ray player with great multimedia support and Smart TV features, even though you do need an Ethernet cable to use them, and the price is right. Ultimately, if you’re primarily a film fan and don’t need 5.1 for your games, this is a great budget option.

Written by

Tom started writing about technology right after graduating from University, but has been a games and gadget fan for as long as he can remember. Beyond photography, music and home entertainment, he's also the first port of call for all reviews content on Expert Reviews.

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