Pioneer BCS-424 review

Fantastic sound quality makes this a great all-in-one, as long as you already have a Smart TV
Written By
Published on 29 July 2012
Our rating
Reviewed price £380 inc VAT

With four free-standing satellite speakers, Pioneer’s BCS424 all-in-one system is more suited to a medium to large-sized home cinema than a small bedroom or study. Set at the perfect height for sofa-based viewing, and with 1,100 watts of power, it could potentially transform your film watching experience.

Pioneer BCS-424

The black glossy plastic might not be to everyone’s taste, but each speaker has fantastic build quality for the price. The floor stands have real weight to them, which means a misplaced arm or adventurous pet is unlikely to topple one. They all have spring terminal connections, but connect to the main unit using a proprietary connector.

As well as speaker inputs, the main unit also has two HDMI inputs and a single HDMI output with Audio Return Channel support for high-definition playback. A single composite video output limits the system’s usefulness with older TVs, but there are plenty of audio inputs. Indeed, its two optical digital ports and analogue RCA phono input should cover most situations. There’s also an FM antenna, an Ethernet port and adaptor port for the optional Bluetooth receiver (Pioneer ASBT200 Bluetooth audio adaptor, £50 from superfi.co.uk). The front has two USB ports and two 3.5mm audio jacks: one for the bundled calibration microphone and another for an auxiliary audio input.

Pioneer BCS-424

File format support was certainly mixed. We played DivX and MOV files, but MKV videos refused to play and H264 files only played audio. You can stream content from a networked PC or NAS device, but only when you run an Ethernet cable to your router because the BCS-424 doesn’t include integrated Wi-Fi.

Pioneer BCS-424

Pioneer doesn’t have the same experience in creating Smart TV platforms as some of the competition, so it should come as no surprise that its features are rather lacking. You’re limited to two options: YouTube video streaming and Picasa online photos. Without catch-up TV services or on-demand video, the BCS-424 suitably complements existing Smart TV owners who can already access such content.

Despite this, its excellent performance in other areas makes up for its smart shortcomings. Image quality’s arguably on par with the best all-in-one systems we’ve seen. High-definition images look bright, having plenty of contrast, although some shadow detail was lacking at the default settings and edges were aggressively smoothed. Thankfully, you counteract this in the picture settings menu, where the three presets and the more advanced User mode give you more control over image sharpness and noise reduction. Sadly, you can’t preview your changes; you must stop the film.

Its DVD upscaling seems mostly focussed on noise reduction rather than edge sharpening. There was a definite reduction in detail, although colours were preserved and there were few artefacts.

Pioneer BCS-424

Most importantly for an all-in-one system, sound quality was excellent. Filling our test room at a little over half volume, there was plenty of room to manoeuvre for anyone looking to equip a larger room with surround sound. The free-standing speakers pump audio straight at your ears, creating audio that encompasses you with no noticeable gaps. The centre speaker never felt drowned out, even with the subwoofer pushing out surprisingly capable bass, and we couldn’t spot any distortion unless we really pushed the volume to its maximum.

It isn’t as well equipped as the competition for Smart TV features, but in many respects the BCS-424 is still an ideal all-in-one home cinema system. Picture quality is – for the most part – excellent, and sound quality is above what we expect from a combined system of this price. If your budget won’t stretch to separates, this is the next best thing.

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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