Pyle House 4” Mini Dice Bookshelf Audio system-Paper Cone Driver, 200 Watt Energy, 8 Ohm Impedance, Video Shielding, House Theater Software and Audio Stereo Encompass Sound System – 1 Pair -PCB4BK (Black)
Original price was: $47.99.$33.99Current price is: $33.99.
Worth: $47.99 - $33.99
(as of Apr 14, 2025 20:46:22 UTC – Particulars)
PyleHome Mannequin : PCB4BK
4” Mini Dice Bookshelf Audio system
4” 200 Watt Black Mini Dice Bookshelf Speaker In Black(Pair)
- Full Vary Mini Speaker System
- Nice for House Theater Functions
- Video Shielded
- 4” Paper Cone Driver
- Energy Dealing with: 200 Watts Peak
- Frequency Response: 80Hz – 18 KHz
- 8 Ohm Impedance
- Dimensions: 4.8”(H) x 4.8”(W) x 5.2”(D
These black full vary mini dice bookshelf audio system could look cute, however they pack an enormous punch. They’re nice for house theater methods or stereos, and so they look sharp on tables or bookshelves. These audio system are powered by 4′ paper cone drivers pushing 200 watts, delivering a frequency response of 80 Hz to 18 kHz. They’re additionally video shielded to stop harm to CRT screens. Whenever you’re on the lookout for energy in a small package deal, look to those bookshelf audio system from Pyle Professional.
200 WATT POWER: These mini bookshelf audio system have an influence dealing with of 200 watts peak that can produce excessive sound resonance. It has an 8 Ohm impedance and nice for watching motion pictures, listening to music and extra
VIDEO SHIELDED: Constructed with video shielding to make sure optimum expertise whereas in use. They won’t distort TV photographs, particularly for CRT screens and keep away from completely damaging image tube with magnetic interruptions
4” PAPER CONE DRIVER: This can be a pair of clean-cut dice audio system that boasts a 4” paper cone driver. It is going to improve house theater stereo expertise by producing a robust audio and ideal sound high quality
FOR HOME APPLICATIONS: These mini dice audio system are offered in pairs and every has a dimension of 4.8”(H) x 4.8”(W) x 5.2”(D). It’s simply the proper dimension for house theater purposes and may simply be positioned anyplace
FULL RANGE SPEAKER: Regardless the dimensions, they’ve a frequency response of 80Hz – 18 KHz offering unmatched audio high quality and can suffice as a house encompass system. Additionally they look trendy in traditional black
Prospects say
Prospects discover these audio system ship good sound high quality, with one mentioning they’re good for vinyl listening, and admire their compact dimension that matches properly in leisure facilities and below desks. They obtain optimistic suggestions for his or her performance, notably in bed room encompass sound methods, look, and ease of set up. Prospects contemplate them glorious worth for cash and reward their energy capabilities, with one noting they’ll deal with as much as 200 watts. The construct high quality receives blended opinions, with some clients describing them as stable whereas others report poor high quality points.
13 reviews for Pyle House 4” Mini Dice Bookshelf Audio system-Paper Cone Driver, 200 Watt Energy, 8 Ohm Impedance, Video Shielding, House Theater Software and Audio Stereo Encompass Sound System – 1 Pair -PCB4BK (Black)
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Original price was: $47.99.$33.99Current price is: $33.99.
Rosemary Carter –
Pleasantly surprised!
Because of the price, I was doubtful but after I hooked everything up and heard the sound, I was so pleased. I do have a small room but the sound is really great for such small speakers. Very pleased with everything.
Dave –
I WOULD RECCOMEND GETTING THE 4 INCH CUBES RAHER THEN THE 3 INCH CUBES.
The speakers are a good value, and will fill a room with clean audio. They are great speakers, and don’t take up a lot of room. Yes you can actually fit on your desk if so desired. I returned the 3 inch cubes. And went for the 4 inch cubes. The 3 inch I got either was a defect out of the batch I received, or perhaps they all have this manufacture defect. The smaller 3 inch cubes have a circle mesh front face. The outside of the mesh had bumps all overthe front corners of the speakers. This wont effect the speakers performance, although this is definitely quite an eye soar. This is why I swapped out for the 4 inch cubes. For the small price difference, you will have 200 watts handling rather then 100 watts with the smaller 3 inch cubes.Plus the 4 inch cubes fill the entire face of the front of the speaker with mess. This will guarantee you wont have the cosmetic issue , that i had with the 3 inch cubes. The 3 inch perhaps is getting the bubbling from a heating process when being manufactured. Regardless, this in my opinoin is a defect.Go 4inch cubes, and you will be happy.The only negative with the 4 inch , is if you shake one speaker . Sounds like a loose piece of plastic is jumping around inside the speaker. Other then that they are good.
Matt Mcdonough –
Quality and price
Excellent quality and price.
J. C. Kos –
Logos and loud
Great addition to my sound system.
Bubba Gump –
WOW! The best tiny guitar speaker!
I hooked these up in parallel to my Quilter Super Block US 25-watt output as a home office guitar amp setup, and they are the perfect speaker for the Quilter! They are super articulate at whisper-quiet and stay clean at ear-piercing loud volumes. I had a hunch that these would be good with the silver dome like a tiny JBL D120 Ha! I can nail the Fender clean and Skynyrd tones at super quiet levels and crank it up when the wife leaves the house! Finally the perfect office/ bedroom setup!
Tommy –
Be sure this is all you want
I bought the slightly larger version with a 4″ full-range woofer rather than the 3″. I’m using them as surround channels for a 5.1 setup. They were essentially a little Christmas gift to myself. On a whim I decided to find something basic and affordable (under $50) to add that surround sound dimensionality to my home theater setup. After looking at the handful of options available (I could only find about 10) I felt like this would probably be the best bang for my buck.I can’t compare them to other small speakers like the Micca Covo because I haven’t auditioned those, but I can say these are basically a “you get what you pay for” situation. At $37/pair as of this writing (with a “used – like new” option available for $23) it’s pretty hard to be disappointed with them as long as they work, and they do. They are pretty lacking in bass (but there’s a hint of it), and due to the lack of a tweeter, they don’t have the same clarity or resolution of my front channel Wharfedale 225’s. That said, those are $350/pair so these lil’ guys were literally a tenth of the price. Wharfedale would have a problem on their hands (as would every speaker manufacturer) if these kept up with something 10x the cost. Anyway, I know they wouldn’t be on par with my other speakers when I got them, but what I didn’t realize was that it’d be juuust noticeable and obvious enough to send me on a quest to upgrade them. Right now I’m looking at options like the Micca MB42X: basically this in a more solid cabinet and with a tweeter for about $50 more.I say all that to say, I’m not disappointed with these because it’s basically what I expected: a 4″ woofer in a plastic cabinet which performs like a 4″ woofer in a plastic cabinet. Considering the size of it and the fact that this one woofer is tasked with covering everything from the lowest lows to the highest highs without the help of a tweeter, I think it performs admirably.So if you *just* want some sort of sound coming from your surround channels to turn your 3.1 setup into a 5.1 setup, these will do the job and will do so for less than $40 which is the home theatre equivalent of an impulse purchase. From that perspective, these are maybe the biggest upgrade you can add to a home theatre for so little money. For me, personally, I think I should have been a bit less frugal from the start and made my budget “under $100” instead of “under $50” because I already have the itch to upgrade them to, at the bare minimum, something with a tweeter. I didn’t appreciate how much I would notice the lack of one in a surround channel, but I do.
Howard –
Good Communications Speaker
I amusing these speakers with my Ham radios vs music, not the intent of the manufacturer but with very good results.From a ‘cosmetic’ point of view they match the color scheme and size-wise blend well with the radios. Very good mid-range performance – which is perfect for voice. Enough bass and treble coverage for the speaking to sound normal and they drive well with 1 – 3 watts of power from the source. Also, one radio I use receives FM broadcast band and while a mono signal, the audio from one speaker is also very good leading me to think they would also be a good performance/value for a home theater system as well.
Rick Watke –
They are an abject failure
These are the worst speakers I have ever had. They are a zero. They failed within 5 minutes of trying them. I had them turned down low and they still failed. I will never buy a product from this company unless they provide a total refund.
Lee –
Fantastic little speakers using them as a 3rd and 4th speaker set up in my pool room , they have given what was a good sound perfect all round the room sound with excellent clarity, a fantastic star buy
günter theilig –
Kleine Lautsprecher mit gutem Klang
RUNRON –
Works great. Good sound
Mr. Online –
Small speaker but good quality
Gordon –
I was looking for some reasonably compact speakers to use with my laptop; something to give better sound than the built-in speakers, but that didn’t take up significant desk space. I already had a Behringer UMC204HD that I was using for headphone output, so bought these speakers together with a Fosi Audio BT20C mini amplifier.Overall sound quality is decent for the size of the speakers — you don’t expect earth-shattering bass from a pair of 4-inch speakers that cost £30. Clearly, these don’t compete with larger speakers for low-end and won’t be as detailed at the high-end as something with dedicated tweeters. They meet my goals: the sound is significantly better than my laptop’s speakers, they didn’t cost much, and they just squeeze under my displays.I should note that very strong low-frequency signals do generate an odd noise from these speakers. I’ve never noticed it in normal use, but passing a pure, loud 100Hz tone or using an online white-noise speaker phase test at relatively high volume results in a sort of ‘loose’ flapping/crackling sound. I think this is just due to trying to drive the speakers too hard outside of their rated frequecy range, but certainly something to be aware of.