Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Victrola’s new turntable is a plug-and-play vinyl solution for Sonos fans

Victrola, a company that’s best-known for its affordable and fun retro and suitcase-style record players, has created a new turntable designed expressly for vinyl fans who also own Sonos wireless speakers. The $800 Victrola Stream Carbon looks nothing like the company’s other models, with a minimalist, clean style and a distinctive, illuminated volume knob. Under the hood, it has something that no other turntable currently offers: a way to connect directly to Sonos speakers over Wi-Fi or Ethernet, with no middle-man hardware like the Sonos Port.

Victrola Stream Carbon.
Victrola

Once it’s set up, the Stream Carbon will show up in the Sonos app as an audio source, which can be played across any speakers or other components in your Sonos system. You can change the volume using the Sonos app, or with that cool volume knob on the Stream’s front panel.

Previously, if you wanted to pipe your vinyl into a Sonos system, you needed to hardwire your turntable into a Sonos component with input jacks. And your choices were limited: the Sonos Five, Sonos Port, and Sonos Amp are effectively the only Sonos products that offer this.

Victrola Stream Carbon.
Victrola

At $800, the Stream is admittedly, not the most affordable turntable on the market, and vinyl fans may balk at the idea of spending that kind of money on a product made by Victrola. But a closer look at the Stream’s other specs suggests that it might actually be a reasonable price. It’s a belt-driven unit that sports a carbon fiber tonearm, a custom removable headshell, and an Ortofon Red 2M cartridge. There’s a built-in pre-amp in case you want to also run it as a wired audio source, and the counterweight is fully adjustable. Victrola says the Stream uses a low-resonance veneer plinth with “premium” metal components. When not in use, you can protect the system with the included low-profile dust cover.

Victrola Stream Carbon.
Victrola

On the one hand, listening to vinyl wirelessly goes against the whole idea of keeping the original analog sound intact from stylus to speaker — something that audiophiles aim for. But if you want the convenience of wireless audio, having a turntable that can pipe that signal over Wi-Fi instead of Bluetooth (as so many turntables have started to do) is a far better way to preserve the sound of your favorite records.

What we don’t yet know is how effective the Stream’s analog-to-digital conversion is at capturing and transmitting that audio to a Sonos system. If it doesn’t do as good a job as the analog-to-digital conversion performed by a Sonos component, you might still be better off buying a high-quality turntable without the Stream’s Sonos integration.

The Victrola Stream Carbon turntable is available for pre-order now at victrola.com, as well as at Best Buy’s Magnolia Design Centers and other specialty audio retailers. Units will ship and be widely available in October.

Editors' Recommendations

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
JBL’s retro-style wireless speakers could spark serious envy among Sonos fans
JBL Authentics 300.

JBL Authentics 500. JBL

JBL has long dominated the portable Bluetooth speaker market with its rugged and great-sounding Clip, Flip, and Charge speakers, but apart from a few smart soundbars, it has never taken a serious shot at Sonos' wireless multiroom crown. Until now. Today, JBL has launched a family of three retro-style portable wireless speakers it calls the Authentics. With prices that range from $330 to $700 and a huge list of Sonos-like features -- including Dolby Atmos -- it's clear that JBL is no longer content to just be the wireless speaker you take to the beach. The Authentics will be available to buy starting September 17; here's everything you need to know.
The new JBL Authentics
JBL Authentics 300. JBL

Read more
Fluance’s new RT81+ flagship turntable is $300 worth of versatility
The Fluance RT81+ Elite turntable with a white speaker on a table.

Canadian hi-fi audio makers Fluance today launched a new addition to its flagship Elite lineup of turntables, the RT81+ Elite High Fidelity Vinyl Turntable, an upgraded version of its popular entry-level record player, the RT81. Known for their hefty build quality and stable, anti-resonant performance, the $300 RT81+ pushes things further with a new Audio-Technica cartridge that is fully upgradeable, a redesigned anti-resonant aluminum platter, and new sound-isolating feet.

At the $300 price range, the belt-driven Fluance RT81+ Elite straddles the fine line between entry-level and mid-range, making an intriguing option for those just getting into vinyl records and those who either have a little more money to spend or want to take the next step. Like many of Fluance's other turntables, like the higher-end RT85N Reference turntable, what helps make these next steps possible is upgradeability.

Read more
Android users are about to lose a handy Sonos feature
An Android phone with the Sonos app showing the music sources tab menu, next to a Sonos Roam wireless speaker.

Sonos customers who use Android devices to control their wireless speakers are about to lose the ability to play music files that are stored locally on their phones or tablets. As spotted by The Verge, Sonos recently (and quietly) announced that as of May 23, 2023, the Sonos app for Android will no longer give you the On this Mobile Device option in the app's Music Sources tab.

Apple users already know what this is like. The same feature was removed from iOS and iPadOS versions of the Sonos app several years ago. The difference, though, is that as Apple user owns a newish Sonos speaker (basically any product released since the Sonos One) they have the option to stream any content from their phones to their Sonos gear over AirPlay 2, a lossless, 16-bit wireless protocol that's supported on tons of Sonos products.

Read more