C

Corey13

Audiophyte
I got a Bose solo TV speaker that I want to hook up to my denon receiver, I had surround sound hooked up and a couple speakers have broken so all I have is the 2 front ones. I would like to hook Bose up as a center. And also be able to use one remote for the volume and on/off for the whole unit
 
BMXTRIX

BMXTRIX

Audioholic Warlord
From what I'm seeing, it looks like the Bose Solo is a fully powered speaker designed for stand alone use. It isn't designed to be connected to an A/V receiver. It's 100% designed for stand alone use.

Unless your product is somehow different than this one:

I would sell the Bose and get some proper speakers for the room instead.
 
S

SimplyEpic

Audioholic
I agree I would sell it if you are looking to connect to an AV receiver. Even in the description it mentions several times about 1 connection which wouldn't allow the Bose to connect to an AV.
It just uses the TV and connectivity via Bluetooth devices for source material.
 
P

Pik95

Junior Audioholic
I hooked up a Bose Acoustimass one Cube system to a two year old Yamaha AV. The key was the cubes had to be run into the big bose Sub/Amp thing. Then that connects to the AV itself. I run bluetooth through the system loud and it sounds decent enough. Hope that helped.
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
I hooked up a Bose Acoustimass one Cube system to a two year old Yamaha AV. The key was the cubes had to be run into the big bose Sub/Amp thing. Then that connects to the AV itself. I run bluetooth through the system loud and it sounds decent enough. Hope that helped.
A bit different altho typical of Bose not to use standard connections to enable normal components to be used.
 

Latest posts

newsletter

  • RBHsound.com
  • BlueJeansCable.com
  • SVS Sound Subwoofers
  • Experience the Martin Logan Montis
Top