EXCLUSIVE REVIEW! Our verdict on the Philips WACS7500 wireless music system

As promised, we'll continue to bring you a selection of exclusive product reviews on whathifi.com, ahead of publication in the magazine.

This week we've been running our fingers (and ears) over the new version of Philips's wireless music system, the WACS7500.

Its 80GB hard disk can store up to 1500 CDs and stream music wirelessly to up to five clients around the house. The central 'hub' includes a CD player and FM radio.

To find out exactly how it performed and our verdict, read on....

PHILIPS WACS7500

£700

3 stars

For

Great looks, good materials, fine build; thoughtful and effective way of collating and sending music around the house without wires

Against

Sound is inadequate across the board

Verdict

Solves one problem ('what do I do with all these wires?'), but creates another ('how do I get a good wireless sound?')

ON PAPER, THE Philips WACS7500 is the answer to every house-proud householder's dreams. It's a central 'hub' unit, tricked out with an 80GB hard disk drive, CD player and FM radio, able wirelessly to send music to as many as five 'client' units around the home (£700 buys the main unit and one client).

It's simple to use, too. Load a CD into the main unit, and it's quickly copied to the hard disk. Compression ratios of between 128 and 320kbps are claimed.

The disk should be good for 1500 CDs or so, and the '7500 has access to Gracenote for finding track names, album art and so on.

Turn on your client unit in a far-flung part of the house and it makes a connection to the main unit in seconds. From there, you have access to all of the music on your central hard disk drive.

So far, so great. So here's the but: neither the main unit nor the client sounds good. Both are fitted with NXT-type loudspeakers, which adds to the system's stylish cachet but does nothing for audio ability.

Looks fine, sounds poor

Low frequencies are mushy and the top end is reminiscent of someone playing tissue-paper and comb. The preset EQs make matters worse - and as for the button labelled 'incredible surround'. No it isn't...

On paper the WACS7500 is a brilliant solution to an all-too-common problem. In practice, it solves only the wiring part of the equation - for the music-making aspect, it comes up shorter than Danny De Vito.

Technorati Tags: CD, FM, Music server, NXT, Wi-fi

Andy Clough

Andy is Global Brand Director of What Hi-Fi? and has been a technology journalist for 30 years. During that time he has covered everything from VHS and Betamax, MiniDisc and DCC to CDi, Laserdisc and 3D TV, and any number of other formats that have come and gone. He loves nothing better than a good old format war. Andy edited several hi-fi and home cinema magazines before relaunching whathifi.com in 2008 and helping turn it into the global success it is today. When not listening to music or watching TV, he spends far too much of his time reading about cars he can't afford to buy.