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The 3.1.2-channel LG SN8YG soundbar ticks many of our favorite boxes, including Dolby Atmos and DTS:X object-based sound, eARC support for lossless audio, room calibration, and built-in Chromecast and Google Assistant.
More importantly, the $800 SN8YG doesn’t skimp on sonic fundamentals, paying special attention to the mid-range audio that too many of its competitors tend to gloss over. While its flat sound signature won’t appeal to all tastes and it lacks soundstage-boosting side-firing drives, the LG SN8YG’s full, rich audio quality nails the basics.
This review is part of TechHive’s coverage of the best soundbars, where you’ll find reviews of competing products, plus a buyer’s guide to the features you should consider when shopping.
The LG SN8YG is a 3.1.2-channel soundbar that includes the standard left, center, right, and low-frequency channels (the “3.1”) as well as two height channels (the “.2” at the end) for immersive Dolby Atmos and DTS:X sound. If you wish, you can turn the 440-watt SN8YG into a full-on 5.1.2 system by adding LG’s optional SPK8-S wireless surround speaker kit. (LG didn’t supply the SPK8-S for testing.)
The SN8YG’s left, center, and right channels each have one 40 x 100mm woofer and one 20mm silk tweeter dome, while a pair of 2.5-inch drivers supply the sound for the height channels. Finally, the wireless subwoofer houses a 7-inch driver.
The SN8YG’s upfiring drivers work by bouncing sound off your ceiling, an appealingly easy and inexpensive alternative to installing height speakers in your ceiling. There is a catch when it comes to upfiring drivers for 3D audio formats such as Dolby Atmos and DTS:X, however: you need to have the right ceiling. A flat ceiling between 7.5 and 14 feet is ideal, according to Dolby, while vaulted ceilings will mar the effect.
The LG SN8YG’s two up-firing drivers deliver the height effects for Dolby Atmos and DTS:X soundtracks.
The main soundbar unit measures 41.7 x 2.2 x 4.7 inches, a relatively low profile that shouldn’t block the bottom edge of most TVs when the soundbar is sitting in front. Even with my 55-inch LG C9 OLED TV, a notoriously low-slung set, the top of the SN8YG’s housing barely grazed the C9’s bottom edge, not enough to give me any bother (and I’m a stickler for anything that blocks the margins of my TV screen).
The design of the SN8YG’s main housing is virtually identical to that of LG’s 2019 soundbars, including the SL10RG that I reviewed last year. Unlike some soundbars that are covered in fabric, the SN8YG’s bare shell exposes both the front speaker grille as well as the top circular grilles for the twin upfiring drivers. While the brushed top of the SN8YG looks stylish, it also tends to reflect bright images from the TV, although I never found the reflections to be unduly distracting.
Getting the SN8YG up and running was, for me at least, a painless operation. You can place the soundbar directly in front of your TV or mount it on a wall; mounting brackets, a screw kit, and a mounting guide are included. I opted to simply place the soundbar in front of my TV.
The SN8YG is slightly different from other soundbars I’ve tested in that its power cord comes in two segments, with a relatively bulky power brick sitting in the middle. While placing the power brick might be awkward depending on the configuration of your TV setup, it also means that the two-prong power plug isn’t saddled with a wall wart that blocks nearby outlets.
The wireless subwoofer (which isn’t really wireless, given that it comes with a five-foot power cord) comes pre-paired with the soundbar, and it seamlessly connected to the main soundbar unit once I powered both of them up. There’s also a manual pairing process should the automatic pairing fail for some reason (perhaps due to interference from a nearby wireless router).
Like LG’s other wireless soundbars, the Google Assistant-enabled LG SN8YG uses the Google Home app to connect to your wireless network, and the setup process worked seamlessly for me.
When you power up the soundbar for the first time, Google Assistant immediately chimes in, prompting you to install and run the Google Home mobile app. Once you do, a “Set up LG SN Series ThinQ Soundbar” banner appears near the top of the app’s home screen. Tap the banner, and the Google Home app steps you through the Wi-Fi connection process, from identifying the soundbar and picking a “room” for it to entering your Wi-Fi password and and setting up Voice Match, the Google feature that lets Google Assistant identify your voice. The app also installs any necessary firmware updates. Within five minutes or so, the SN8YG was connected to my Wi-Fi network without any noticeable hiccups.
Thanks to its built-in Chromecast Audio support, you can stream audio to the LG SN8YG via Wi-Fi from practically any Chromecast-enabled app, and you can also stream tunes directly to the soundbar using Bluetooth. I tried both Chromecast and Bluetooth audio streaming during my testing and didn’t encounter any issues. There’s no AirPlay 2 support, unfortunately.
Last but not least, it was time to run the LG SN8YG’s AI-powered room calibration feature, which is also available on LG’s other “premium” 2020 soundbars. The SN8YG’s room calibration feature (which must be run using LG’s Wi-Fi Speaker mobile app) tweaks the soundbar’s audio according to the approximate shape of the room, which it detects by emitting a series of loud beeps, blips. and tones; the soundbar then measures how long it takes for the sounds to bounce back into its integrated microphone array.
While some advanced room calibration systems involve taking readings from up to 32 microphone positions, the LG SN8YG only takes readings from its dual built-in microphones. The LG Wi-Fi Speaker app does let you compare what the SN8YG sounds like before and after calibration, but the loud, muffled clips of nature sounds that it uses for the comparison makes it difficult to judge whether there’s any actual improvement. Still, any room correction functionality is a welcome addition to a soundbar in this price range.
As far as connections to your TV go, the SN8YG comes with one HDMI input (which supports 4K HDR passthrough), an HDMI-ARC port (which can either pass video through to your TV, or accept audio from your TV via the Audio Return Channel protocol), and an optical (Toslink) input.
The LG SN8YG comes euipped with an HDMI 2.0 input, an HDMI-ARC port with eARC support, an optical (Toslink) input, and a USB Type-A port that can read audio files on USB drives.
The easiest way to connect the SN8YG to your TV is via the HDMI-ARC port, which allows you to connect your various video sources to your TV’s HDMI inputs and then send audio back down to the soundbar. Making matters even better is that the SN8YG supports eARC, an enhanced version of ARC that allows for lossless audio formats such as Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio, although the soundbar’s eARC support won’t matter if your TV isn’t compatible with eARC, too (and unless your TV was manufactured in the past year or so, it likely isn’t).
If your TV doesn’t support eARC but you still want to hear lossless high-resolution audio over the SN8YG (typically from a Blu-ray player), you can connect a video source directly to the soundbar’s HDMI 2.0 input. Because the SN8YG only has a single HDMI input (besides its HDMI-ARC port), you’ll need to manually swap video sources if you have more than one (unless you have an A/V receiver or an HDMI switcher).
While most of the soundbars I’ve tested in the past come with an HDMI cable, the LG SN8YG doesn’t, which seems pretty stingy given the SN8YG’s $800 price tag.
Besides the video inputs, the LG SN8YG also comes equipped with a USB Type-A input that (refreshingly) supports media playback, including MP3, AAC, OGG, FLAC, and WAV files.
Along the top of the main SN8YG soundbar housing are touch-sensitive buttons for power, input source (confusingly labeled “F,” for “function”), play/pause, and microphone mute. There’s also a five-digit LED display on the front of the soundbar that tells you the currently selected input and the detected audio format, while four solid dots directly below the readout glow white when the soundbar’s microphone are active and amber when they’re muted (generally during audio playback).
Touch-sensitive buttons along the top of the LG SN8YG’s main housing include power, input select, volume up/down, play/pause, and microphone mute.
The non-backlit remote included with the SN8YG comes with a prominent volume rocker in the top-left corner, a second rocker for input source (“F” again), and mute, plus a Google Assistant button in the middle. A Sound Effect button cycles through the soundbar’s various audio modes (which I’ll cover momentarily), while a Settings button lets you adjust the sound levels for the subwoofer, the center channel, and the height channels, along with treble and bass.
Nine smaller buttons for playback, night mode, and various other functions sit beneath the Google Assistant button and its flanking controls. Curiously, the handy mic mute button on the remote for last year’s LG SL10RG soundbar is (unfortunately) missing from the SN8YG’s remote.
The LG SN8YG’s remote features a prominent center button for summoning Google Assistant.
The aforementioned LG Wi-Fi Speaker app lets you control all the major functions and settings for the SN8YG, including sound modes, sound levels for the various speakers, the sleep timer, and power modes.
Even better is the built-in Google Assistant, which lets you use voice commands to control the soundbar’s volume, change sound modes, power the soundbar on and off, and more. You can also ask Google Assistant anything that you could on a Google Nest Mini, a Google Nest Hub Max, or any other Google smart devices, meaning you can ask about the weather, check your calendar, ask trivia questions, or control compatible smart home devices.
Google Assistant will keep an ear out for the “Hey Google” wake word when the soundbar is idle or in standby mode; during video or music playback, you’ll need to press the Google Assistant button on the remote prior to giving a voice command.
Annoyingly, the volume of Google Assistant’s voice can get way too loud depending on the current volume level of the soundbar. There should be a way to cap the Assistant’s maximum volume. (Continued on the next page.)
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