Moadel82 wrote:
Thabks Ken for ur reply. May i ask you what is the difference between “bonded” and “group” in the context i described? Apologies as i am still not familiar with the Sonos lingo.
A brief summary...
A ‘bonded’ Sonos setup can perhaps be considered as a more-permanent connection between the Sonos devices. It sets all the devices involved to become one Sonos Room in the App - so you may just see all as “Living Room” for example.
The Main HT device communicates to its bonded surrounds mostly/usually over a 5Ghz connection (a wired connection can be used too of course) and it controls/passes the required audio channel to its connected players, which effectively just become dumb slaves to the main player in charge… I just try to think of them all as being one Sonos Room... a bit like your stereo ‘paired’ Sonos Fives are now.
Sonos ‘Rooms’ can be ‘grouped’ with other Sonos Rooms - this is a less permanent connection than those designated devices that ‘bond’ or ‘pair’ together - ‘usually’ the connection is made over a 2.4Ghz wireless band (and/or a wired connection) and is most often created by a user ‘on the fly’ in the Sonos App (System Tab),to play/stream music etc. in sync, across two or more rooms. One room is designated as the Group Controller, that’s usually the room you begin grouping from. It takes charge of the stream and keeping all in sync.
As a quick example, you could break apart your stereo paired Fives to become two separate Sonos rooms and ‘group’ them together to each play both music audio channels in sync, rather than stereo pairing them to each then play either the Left/Right channel audio.
Also for your information, when playing Music/TV audio to a ‘grouped’ room the audio is buffered causing an approx 75ms delay across the group to ensure the audio outputs in sync to all grouped players, but TV HT players do not have the delay (for just for TV audio), as the TV audio has to align with the video output on the TV screen (lip-sync).. but all will play in perfect sync for music audio.
So that’s the basics - I hope you are able to follow that brief explanation.