Q Acoustics Q Active 200
The British company’s enviable reputation for fine-quality speakers bodes well for its first all-in-one streaming system
It’s a simple fact of life that the more there is to do, the more there is to prioritise. For Q Acoustics’ first all-in-one streaming speaker system, the British speaker specialist could have focused most of its attention on the streaming side of things – that is the uncharted territory here, after all.
While the brand has some degree of experience in powered-speaker design, the Q Active 200 is its first proper active streaming proposition. It appears to be a speaker-first design, given the ambitious acoustic engineering on show here. Get the speaker part right, as you’d hope a firm with such plaudits in the field would, and you’re halfway there.
A new look
If you were expecting an active set of speakers resembling Q Acoustics’ current range of standmounters, then the Q Active’s design may raise your eyebrows.
The boxes are narrow, deep and in a beautifully finished matt white – so far, so Q Acoustics. But instead of the usual tweeter and mid/bass woofer decorating each façade, there is a rectangular grille in the top corner that hides two round, 58mm BMR drive units.
It gives the classy cabinets a unique, neatly minimalist look that might sit well in contemporary designed living spaces – but which is likely to divide opinion.
Q Acoustics has chosen to use a pair of balanced mode radiator (BMR) drivers in each cabinet in preference to conventional cone units. BMRS have two big advantages: they deliver both midrange and treble (and a bit of bass) from their modestly sized forms, so avoiding the need for a separate tweeter and mid/bass combination and the distortion-generating crossover that goes along with it. They also radiate sound uniformly across a 180-degree plane, reducing the usual tendency for speakers to create a listening ‘sweet spot’.
Their positioning on the speaker – the dual BMR configuration can sit either on the inside top corner or outside top corner, depending on which way round the speakers are placed – brings some benefits too. According to Q Acoustics, the asymmetry in the acoustic path lengths from the BMRS to the baffle edges improves diffraction characteristics. It also offers flexibility in positioning: for far-field listening (further away or to the sides) they should be positioned to the inside, or for near-field listening, on the outside.
Of course, there’s only so much quantity and depth of bass a 58mm driver can dig up, which is why Q Acoustics has integrated a ported 11cm woofer into the rear of each cabinet.
Distinctive stands
Q Acoustics has designed a pair of dedicated stands for the Q Active 200, the Q FS75; more modest evolutions of the innovative stands designed for the Concept 300. For £350 per pair, they feature a skeletal, highly rigid ‘space’ frame made up of rods in compression stabilised by cables in tension, and have fixings that enable them to be bolted to the standmounters.
Q Acoustics has taken the decision not to house the streaming architecture and connectivity inside the speakers, but instead in a separate hub. There are two hub options to choose from, depending on where your voice-control loyalties lie. The Google Home box (which we have on test) offers Google Assistant voice control, plus built-in Google Chromecast, while the Amazon Alexa box variant works with Alexa.
It’s a shame one box doesn’t cover both bases – there must be plenty of people who use Alexa, for example, but also stream music via Chromecast. And, what if your allegiance changes down the line? Q Acoustics says it’s looking into making each hub individually available, though hasn’t confirmed its plans yet.
Whichever hub you choose, you get the same physical inputs – HDMI (ARC), optical, and an analogue input that is switchable between line-level and moving-magnet. Essentially, that means everything from a CD player to a TV to a turntable can be connected to the hub and streamed to the speakers. Digital signals from the HDMI and optical inputs are all converted to 24-bit/96khz, as are analogue signals through the 24-bit analogue-to-digital converter (ADC).
Rather than the hub streaming these converted signals to a master speaker that passes the other audio channel to
the slave speaker, it sends the two channels of audio directly to them over a 5GHZ wireless connection. This helps ensure accurate syncing between the two speakers.
The hub is also a streaming gateway to Airplay 2 for IOS users, Spotify Connect for Spotify Premium and Family subscribers, and Bluetooth. Support for the Roon music platform is on the way via a future firmware update, too.
Play from your own network
If you own a NAS drive with music, UPNP support is on board for playing networked music files up to 32-bit/ 192khz (which subsequently gets downsampled to 24-bit/96khz for the transmission to the speakers).
Q Acoustics is due to release its dedicated Q Active app that will help with registration and set-up, control hub customisation, software updates and basic controls. It won’t, however, be an all-encompassing music-control app from which you can browse networked or local music libraries and access streaming services.
That’s a shame, but third-party UPNP control apps aren’t hard to come by, and those using Tidal (via Chromecast) or Spotify (via Connect) may choose to use the native apps anyway. For accessing our NAS device, we use the free Mconnect and Bubbleupnp apps on an Apple ipad and Samsung Galaxy S20 phone during our testing and both work without a problem.
Alternatively, use the compact infrared remote control to adjust volume, pause, play and skip tracks and change inputs. A strip of touch buttons across the rear of each speaker’s top panel more or less mirrors the remote control, too. They’re nicely responsive – sometimes more so than the apps we use – although as there’s a short delay in the call and action, we would have liked visual confirmation of the communication from, say, a visible LED. There is an LED by the controls on the top panel that flashes to signify this, but unless you’re standing, you won’t be able to see it.
Q Acoustics has successfully built a reputation for excellent passive speakers in its 15-year history – especially in the budget market. Its products have consistently included class-leading clarity and entertaining punch, and those talents have predictably found their way into the Q Active 200 too.
“Q Acoustics has taken the decision not to house the streaming architecture and connectivity inside the speakers, but in a separate hub”
Lucid, room-filling sound
We play Radical Face’s The Missing Road, from Tidal via Chromecast and the melodic acoustic strums, cello and vocal humming come through with an eager lucidity, the presentation startlingly clear and direct, not to mention room-filling. You shouldn’t necessarily expect Q Acoustics’ typical richness and warmth here, but the active speakers’ leaner,
more forward tonal stance gives them a likeable sense of snappiness.
We stream over Bluetooth, and although we expect the usual drop in quality, the Q Active 200 keep things surprisingly tight. Bluetooth loses a bit of solidity and space compared with UPNP and Google Chromecast playback, but still largely serves as a worthwhile method of playback.
The BMR drivers keep their end up, spreading sound generously and evenly around our test room and ensuring the speakers produce an impressively big presence for their compact footprint. They have the volume and punch to make easy work of John Williams’s climactic compositions, and while that rear-firing woofer is limited in terms of absolute bass depth, it proves taut and terse as the bassline in SBTRKT’S Wildfire (played over UPNP) comes into play. Bass blends in nicely with the rest of the frequencies, too.
Custom settings
To help optimise positioning, each Q Active 200 has three settings selected by a manual switch at its rear. There is ‘Positioned close to a corner’, ‘Positioned close to a wall’, and our preferred ‘Free-space’, which we find works best not only when the speakers were out in the room, but also near the back wall – possibly because the speakers’ bass output isn’t overbearing and the midrange is a little forward. As always, we’d recommend experimenting to see which setting works best in your listening room.
We switch from the dedicated stands to a pair of Custom Design FS104 Signatures and the presentation sheds some clarity – from both a sonic and aesthetic point of view we’d recommend the custom-built accessory. But, while the Q FS75 extracts more from the speakers, the overall differences aren’t huge. Due to the rubber strips beneath the speaker, secure placement on a third-party pair of stands may be fiddly.
Watch the upper midrange
There’s a bit of harshness in the upper mids, which remains audible even after a week of use. It’s not the end of the world, but it does mean higher-pitched voices can start to grate after a while. It also does nothing for a dense, cymbal-heavy track such as Touché Amore’s I’ll Be Your Host.
But our biggest issue with the Q Active 200 is their combined lack of dynamic and rhythmic expression. With Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds’ Galleon Ship, the piano and vocal pairing comes through clear and solid, yet is bereft of real feel.
Everything seems to ride along one audio plane, lacking forward momentum and dynamic tiers. It doesn’t help that the soundstaging isn’t particularly well layered either. In combination, these things mean the track isn’t all that interesting or emotionally grabbing.
Whether trying to grasp the grooves that underpin Thundercat’s Them Changes, or nail the rhythmic logistics integral to the SBTRKT track, the
Q Active 200 don’t quite tie the musical strands together with the coordination necessary for them to thoroughly entertain. They conduct themselves in a startlingly clear and upfront manner, but beyond that they fail to captivate.
Chasing rivals
Offering an entire audio system inside such a compact and convenient concept is no easy task, but products such as the KEF LSX and LS50 Wireless II, which sandwich the Q Acoustics in price, show that it can be done. The Q Active 200 ultimately falls well below the standards set by those rivals, delivering a cruder listen than we’d expect at this notinsignificant price.
It’s rare, if ever, that we publish sentences featuring the words ‘Q Acoustics’ and ‘disappointing’ together, but here the Q Active 200 cannot hide behind its thoughtfully considered spec sheet and speaker engineering. It’s a shame, because the brand has done a lot right – there’s vast connectivity on offer, a whole lot of speaker engineering and dedicated stands for those who want them. But performance-wise, they simply aren’t entertaining enough to recommend. It’s often the case that first efforts are followed by better second ones, and we very much hope that will be the case here.