Which will likely blow any all in one system into the weeds in terms of sound/picture quality and connectivity. You will certainly be able to hook up the Sky box to it very easily to get surround sound off that.
Bit more effort involved setting it all up but well worth it. Plus you don't have the problems of all in ones to put up with. Namely, they tend not to have many (sometimes no) connections for external kit. Plus if the Blu-ray player bit in the unit dies you have to lose the whole lot while it's being repaired. Or have to throw the whole lot away if you feel the urge to upgrade. At least with a separates system you only lose the bit that is faulty or can upgrade in stages, eg better speakers or a newer disk player rather than have to start all over from scratch each time.
Do you need to plug anything else into it Sky, PS3 etc
All new TV's and all current bluray home cinema systems will have "arc" so you would normal plug hdmi 2 on TV to the HC and all the rest goes to the TV as normal . No need for optical feeds etc .
All the big brand names have HC systems in there ranges that give good results , but if you want the ultimate sound then go separates but do your research as some separates have "issues" with ARC --Google the model + you TV model number
For £239 you can get the Yamaha BDX-610 - an all in one blu-ray home cinema system. For a bedroom system it'll offer everything you need - blu-ray, arc, network connectivity for netfilx, internet radio.
If you want to go down the separates route and could stretch the budget then look at this bundle. Granted, it's well over budget but for a home cinema package it's a lot of kit for the money.
I recommend a Yamaha YAS-101 soundbar (£189 from Richer Sounds) and Pioneer BD-P150 Bluray player (£85, also from Richers). That leaves enough left over for an HDMI lead and optical cable.
Which will likely blow any all in one system into the weeds in terms of sound/picture quality and connectivity. You will certainly be able to hook up the Sky box to it very easily to get surround sound off that.
Bit more effort involved setting it all up but well worth it. Plus you don't have the problems of all in ones to put up with. Namely, they tend not to have many (sometimes no) connections for external kit. Plus if the Blu-ray player bit in the unit dies you have to lose the whole lot while it's being repaired. Or have to throw the whole lot away if you feel the urge to upgrade. At least with a separates system you only lose the bit that is faulty or can upgrade in stages, eg better speakers or a newer disk player rather than have to start all over from scratch each time.
I have the yamaha yht-196 and is absolutely amazing, better than any all in one system I have ever used, sound is amazing.
I may need a trip to Specsavers but I can't see any mention of a Blu-Ray player (or any other form of player) in that link. All I can see is another Yamaha AV receiver and speaker package.
i nipped through to richer sounds in Edinburgh yesterday and bought the Yamaha yht 196 and the Sony blu ray player after much hunting through the loft to find 2 hdmi cables im in the process of hooking it up, not enough speaker cable either but will let you know how it sounds
Comments
Do you need to plug anything else into it Sky, PS3 etc
For 300 quid you could get something like this
http://www.richersounds.com/product/1-box-home-cinema-systems/yamaha/yht196/yama-yht196
http://www.richersounds.com/product/blu-ray/sony/bdps490/sony-bdps490-blk
Which will likely blow any all in one system into the weeds in terms of sound/picture quality and connectivity. You will certainly be able to hook up the Sky box to it very easily to get surround sound off that.
Bit more effort involved setting it all up but well worth it. Plus you don't have the problems of all in ones to put up with. Namely, they tend not to have many (sometimes no) connections for external kit. Plus if the Blu-ray player bit in the unit dies you have to lose the whole lot while it's being repaired. Or have to throw the whole lot away if you feel the urge to upgrade. At least with a separates system you only lose the bit that is faulty or can upgrade in stages, eg better speakers or a newer disk player rather than have to start all over from scratch each time.
All new TV's and all current bluray home cinema systems will have "arc" so you would normal plug hdmi 2 on TV to the HC and all the rest goes to the TV as normal . No need for optical feeds etc .
All the big brand names have HC systems in there ranges that give good results , but if you want the ultimate sound then go separates but do your research as some separates have "issues" with ARC --Google the model + you TV model number
If you want to go down the separates route and could stretch the budget then look at this bundle. Granted, it's well over budget but for a home cinema package it's a lot of kit for the money.
I have the yamaha yht-196 and is absolutely amazing, better than any all in one system I have ever used, sound is amazing.