Why I Picked Bose Home over Sonos for my Vinyl / Record Playing

Published 2020-01-22
The TLDR is that I wanted to be able to start playing my records without breaking the bank. Dont get me wrong, home speakers are NOT cheap, and there may be a cheaper set up to do this. I did a lot of research on Sonos, Bose, and even just using some type of Alexa set up to play records, and this worked the best for me at the time (about 6 months ago). There wasn't really any info on this when I first was looking into it so I thought I would make a video/tutorial.

The Pros
- Saves money
- Sounds great
- If you have other bluetooth devices you want to pair, Sonos is less friendly for that
- Your system will work with your other home audio goodies (Spotify, airplay 2, Alexa/google etc)

Cons
- Slight delay with the record needle, if thats something that would bug you?
- The library of Bose home speakers is growing, but still limited
- Again, cheaper than Sonos, but would NOT call it cheap!

Comment below on your 2 cents or questions!

All Comments (9)
  • @unholyCHAD
    thanks for the video ... and super stoked you are a fan of Tiny Moving Parts as well.
  • @ianscott8194
    Sir you are a Saint! I hooked up my audio technica table up with a transmitter and it sounds amazing!!
  • @thtorfason
    Finally someone who show a Record player hooked up to the Bose ecosystem. You have the same products I'm looking to purchase from Bose to work with my record player. Can you plug the record player directly to the aux-in on the Home Speaker 500 and play it to the soundbar or other Bose speakers?
  • Where to buy that little Bluetooth transmitter?? Link please?
  • you didn't say which soundbar you used, will this work with the bose 500 soundbar
  • @ziggarillo
    You can plug you turntable into the aux in socket, Bluetooth is unnecessary
  • @SilentXFoxX71
    How did you connected the Bluetooth transmitter to the Turntable