Logitech Z5500 with xbox one

Bman123

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2008
3,221
1
81
I found a set of logitech Z5500's speakers with the sub and the control unit for dirt cheap, the only thing it is missing is the remote which I can get on amazon for cheap.

I've never heard this set before but i have saw nothing but good things said about it online thru reviews. With me buying the remote and the speaker set it will set me back just under $100. Do you think this is a good buy to use with my cable box and my xbox one via optical cable hooked up to the TV? And will I run into any issues trying to do this?

Thanks in advance
 

sswingle

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2000
7,183
45
91
I've used these speakers for years. In my case I run HDMI from a PS3, Wii U, and cable box to the TV, then optical from the TV to the logitech.
 

cmdrdredd

Lifer
Dec 12, 2001
27,052
357
126
They are actually not bad speakers for a smaller room setup or for what you may have setup for a PC desktop area.
 

Bman123

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2008
3,221
1
81
After further investigating I'm gonna pass on the set and just piece a system together. I'd rather go the whole receive route and buy some decent speakers. Even if I have to buy the stuff piece by piece I think I'd be better off doing it that way and get what I really want
 

videogames101

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2005
6,783
27
91
z5500 were the best speakers logitech ever made, and for those looking for an all-in-one solution at a bargain they can't really be beat. At the same time they do not match up to a serious A/V setup.
 

Bman123

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2008
3,221
1
81
I wouldn't be going hard core with the receiver route, the problem is it's not going to be used at a desk but in a room where I only want to run two fronts a center and a sub.
 

boomhower

Diamond Member
Sep 13, 2007
7,228
19
81
After further investigating I'm gonna pass on the set and just piece a system together. I'd rather go the whole receive route and buy some decent speakers. Even if I have to buy the stuff piece by piece I think I'd be better off doing it that way and get what I really want

That's the way to go. A 3.1 set-up can be done pretty cheap. How much are you looking to spend?
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
I've heard a lot of praise for the Monoprice 5.1 premium set. That plus a halfway decent receiver should easily be doable for that range. And I highly suspect it will be better than any HTIB kit.


That said, I also have the Z-5500, but for my PC. It serves it's purpose perfectly - but I don't know if I'd ever consider it worthy of the living room. My living room has a receiver and surround set which blow these things out of the water with good content.
That said, for music and games, and possibly some movies/tv shows if you watch from the PC, these are great.

I don't have true surround with the logitech set though. In my current apartment situation, I have no place to throw the rear speakers from the computer desk, so they are basically all in a row on my desk.
 

Bman123

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2008
3,221
1
81
The last thing I'll buy is the sub as I'm not even sure I want one to begin with. I'm looking for bookshelf speakers now
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
You gotta have a sub. It fills out the sound.

Yeah, unless you have massive speakers which have dedicated woofers built in, you'll be missing far, far too much of the low end.

The other thing, especially for the budget - if you are buying home-theater-specific speakers, that budget will definitely not provide speakers that can provide full sound at the low frequencies. You might get speakers that can HIT those frequencies, but they will be slightly hollow in comparison. Not that you can't get an overall great sound without a sub, it's entirely possible if you find the right speakers. But I would never recommend it, not after experiencing just how much a sub can do.

I have a sub that I have turned WAY down from it's highest potential. It wouldn't be THAT low, except I live in an apartment so I want to be courteous. That said, it still hits hard enough to warrant turning down the overall volume at times, but other times, the lower setting (plus EQ and sound level calibration from the receiver) also provides just the right punch to the low end to round out and make the scene sound real.

My sub, a Paradigm PS-10 or something like that, (300w?) is definitely more than I'll ever need in small listening environments. Whenever I get a house or a place where I can a) have a larger room for a home-theater, or b) simply not worry about pissing other people off, I'll be raising the level. I think it'll fulfill anything I actually need unless I move into a mansion with an absolutely massive home theater room.

Point being: you don't need much sub, but a larger sub will help push more air volume, and a quality sub will also hit lower frequencies and do so with higher accuracy. You don't need much power in most listening environments, but good quality sound does wonders.
 

TheAdvocate

Platinum Member
Mar 7, 2005
2,561
7
81
Thought I had the z5500, turns out I have the z5450. May not help you much, but I have had this set for years and they are wonderful. Wireless backchannel, sufficient sub, small control unit. Pretty much everything you could want in a basic, simple, easy to use 5.1 system. It's part of my "older" HT/gaming room. Has an xbox360, my PC, HDDVD player (I know, I know) and cable TV hooked up to it. I wouldn't trade them for anything.

h933.jpg
 

Bman123

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2008
3,221
1
81
The price is good but is that worth it at all? It's got a hefty markdown but the tiny satelittes are throwing me away from it.
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
The price is good but is that worth it at all? It's got a hefty markdown but the tiny satelittes are throwing me away from it.

One, make sure you only get this set (the Premium version) if you pick these out:
http://www.monoprice.com/Product?c_id=109&cp_id=10906&cs_id=1090601&p_id=10565&seq=1&format=2

Which is this one at rakuten: http://monoprice.shop.rakuten.com/p...th-subwoofer/254155920.html?sellerid=37816583


You get what you pay for. Do realize that a high-quality listening experience is not something you can buy for cheap. I have heard, however, from numerous sources (including a buddy who owns the set, and a buddy who pointed said buddy to that set - also, the internet), that this set is better than budget brands from other companies at that price level or a little higher.

Now, those speakers do unfortunately sit quite high on the low-end of frequency response. The official specs say the satellites only go down to 110Hz. Which, if you set the low-pass filter correctly, that's not a huge deal because the rest of the lower frequencies will be sent to the sub, of which they claim goes down to 30Hz. If it does, that's very respectable for a budget set. And I'd rather the sub only go so low as 30Hz if it allows better accuracy, as opposed to throwing very muddy and distorted tones between 20-30Hz.
Most ears can sort of hear down to 20Hz. For many, 20-30Hz isn't so much heard, as it is felt. It can be heard by some. And some real premium subs will even go below 20Hz, simple to add more earthiness to the environment (since many things do produce those low tones in life).

Ideally, you could get satellite speakers going down as far as 50Hz, or perhaps only down to 80Hz. It is considered a better practice to try and limit the total frequency range the subwoofer is responsible for, and a subwoofer will also be less accurate with higher-frequency tones. 50Hz may be somewhat low, but it's usually better coming out of a mid-sized driver on a speaker.

This is why many rear-satellites don't often go much lower than 80 or 50Hz (rough numbers, to illustrate the point better), and are smaller, whereas good front speakers, especially towers or very large "bookshelf" models, may go down as low as 30 or 35Hz on their own. If tuned right, it's good to have the front sound stage generating more accurate but less "punchy" mid-bass tones, and then having the subwoofer overlap with more punch on those tones and the lower ones to breath life into the sound stage. Without the sub, that good sound stage would sound accurate, but somewhat "dead" or "flat". Most quality tower speakers can generate some decently punchy mid-bass tones, or even the low-end of true bass tones, but they can never replace the only component that can actually give that car crash the hearty punch you'd hear if you saw it in person.
 

Aikouka

Lifer
Nov 27, 2001
30,383
912
126
Thought I had the z5500, turns out I have the z5450. May not help you much, but I have had this set for years and they are wonderful. Wireless backchannel, sufficient sub, small control unit. Pretty much everything you could want in a basic, simple, easy to use 5.1 system. It's part of my "older" HT/gaming room. Has an xbox360, my PC, HDDVD player (I know, I know) and cable TV hooked up to it. I wouldn't trade them for anything.

I had those as well, and it was a fantastic speaker system. Unfortunately, one of my rear speakers went out, and it seems like my control pod sometimes overheats (it drops the sound, freezes and shuts off 30 seconds later). I'm pretty sure I searched eBay for a replacement, but I couldn't find one. I talked to Logitech, and they ended up giving me a coupon for a percentage off their store (a fairly sizable discount) since my Z5450 was out of warranty. I ended up getting their latest 5.1 system, but it's just not the same. I kind of miss the flare of the Z5450 like the nice LED-based control pod. My current one just has lights on it.

I ended up piecing out most of my Z5450 on eBay. The tiny remote alone goes for $20! :eek: