The king of “boomboxes”. 800 watts RMS and battery powered. Plenty of deep powerful bass

Bassboost432

Member (SA)
I hate to admit it but these new power towers are the new “boomboxes” of today. And they sound incredible.
 
Last edited:

Reli

Boomus Fidelis
Eh.....if it can't sit on a shelf or be swung around without hitting the pavement, it's not a boombox imho
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ken

Bassboost432

Member (SA)
Eh.....if it can't sit on a shelf or be swung around without hitting the pavement, it's not a boombox imho
I completely feel you. But here’s the good part: NOW, there’s no excuse for companies not to be able to remake 80’s 90’s style boom boxes that also make 800 watts rms. Imagine a new 800 watt JVC kaboom, or Panasonic dt680. It’s a new frontier!!!
 

Superduper

Moderator
Staff member
Already starting:

But this JBL thing is not a boombox as to how the members of this community generally sees a boombox, it is a bluetooth powered speaker. I wouldn't even say it compares to the Pioneer DiscoRobo, because even that has a cassette deck and radio, and mixing capability. That's not to say it's not useful. When my daughter recently got married, a device like this was convenient in playing back wedding specific tunes from an iphone, so these types of things have it's place.
 

Reli

Boomus Fidelis
I call those things party speakers instead of boomboxes. They're great for pool parties and house parties, but that's about it. No one is going to walk down the street with one.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Tinman

XLVII

New Member
Hi, I own an integrated amp, a Realistic SA 155, with 1.8 watts per channel @ 8 ohms with 20-20,000 hz frequency response. Not a boombox, but the the volume and full tonal range was literally unbelievable! Modern,800 watt claims, remind me of bargain car audio eq/amp claims of 200+ watts per channel back in the 80s. Look to your output caps . Replaced 470's with 2200's in a Panasonic RX 5100 (5 watts per channel); what a difference! Thanks.
 

Bassboost432

Member (SA)
Hi, I own an integrated amp, a Realistic SA 155, with 1.8 watts per channel @ 8 ohms with 20-20,000 hz frequency response. Not a boombox, but the the volume and full tonal range was literally unbelievable! Modern,800 watt claims, remind me of bargain car audio eq/amp claims of 200+ watts per channel back in the 80s. Look to your output caps . Replaced 470's with 2200's in a Panasonic RX 5100 (5 watts per channel); what a difference! Thanks.
How did the replacement caps improve the sound especially the deep bass? Thx.
 

Bassboost432

Member (SA)
Hi, I own an integrated amp, a Realistic SA 155, with 1.8 watts per channel @ 8 ohms with 20-20,000 hz frequency response. Not a boombox, but the the volume and full tonal range was literally unbelievable! Modern,800 watt claims, remind me of bargain car audio eq/amp claims of 200+ watts per channel back in the 80s. Look to your output caps . Replaced 470's with 2200's in a Panasonic RX 5100 (5 watts per channel); what a difference! Thanks.
That’s impressive for only 1.8 watts. Sounds like it would even out perform holy grails like the kaboom with its 20 watts per channel. That’s some SERIOUS engineering going on with that 1.8 watts. I’d love to hear it.
 

Reli

Boomus Fidelis
How do car audio systems get water with thousands of watts per channel RMS? Is it possible to do that in a home too?

Because in most cases it's BS.

Back in the 70s, most manufacturers abided by the FTC standard, where they would measure minimum output across the entire audible spectrum. So when they said 1.8 watts per channel, that was the MINIMUM it could deliver across that spectrum. The maximum would be a higher number which was rarely provided, because who cares what the maximum is if it only occurs at one single frequency?

But today's manufacturers only tell you the maximum, not the minimum. If you see someone saying RMS instead of FTC, and without the word "minimum", that's what they're doing. Plus they measure it at some ridiculously high distortion level like 10%, which is not tolerable by any reasonable person.

And even with all that, it could still be BS, because unfortunately the government doesn't force them to tell the truth. I've seen so many products saying RMS when it's clear that it's really just PMPO, because no plastic bluetooth speaker could handle the RMS they're claiming.
 
Last edited: