

🎬 Elevate your home cinema game with Denon’s powerhouse soundbar & subwoofer combo!
The Denon DHT-S316 is a sleek, wall-mountable soundbar paired with a wireless subwoofer delivering 40W max power and immersive 5.1 surround sound via Dolby Digital and DTS decoding. Featuring Bluetooth streaming with a 10m range, a Dialogue Enhancer for crystal-clear speech, and easy HDMI ARC setup, it’s designed for millennials seeking premium home theater audio with effortless connectivity and impactful bass.





| ASIN | B08CZRC7T6 |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Antenna Location | For surround sound systems, For televisions |
| Audio Driver Size | 5.5 Centimetres |
| Audio Driver Type | Dynamic Driver |
| Audio Output Mode | Surround |
| Audio output mode | Surround |
| Best Sellers Rank | 3,431 in Electronics & Photo ( See Top 100 in Electronics & Photo ) 24 in Soundbar Speakers |
| Bluetooth Range | 10 Metres |
| Box Contents | DHT-S316 Soundbar, Wireless Subwoofer |
| Brand | Denon |
| Brand Name | Denon |
| Colour | DHT-S316 Soundbar with Subwoofer |
| Compatible Devices | Home Theater, Laptop, Smartphone, Tablet, Television |
| Connectivity Protocol | HDMI and Bluetooth |
| Connectivity technology | Bluetooth |
| Control Method | Remote |
| Controller Type | Remote Control |
| Country of Origin | China |
| Customer Package Type | Standard Packaging |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 out of 5 stars 1,005 Reviews |
| Is Electric | Yes |
| Is Waterproof | False |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 8.2D x 90W x 5.5H centimetres |
| MP3 player | No |
| Manufacturer | Denon |
| Manufacturer Contact Information | Fidelity Supply Chain Solutions Ltd. Orion Close, Mustang Park, Daventry, Northamptonshire, NN11 8NW, United Kingdom |
| Maximum Speaker Output Power (in watts) | 40 Watts |
| Model Name | DHT-S316 |
| Model Number | DHTS316HBKE2GB |
| Model name | DHT-S316 |
| Mounting Type | Wall Mount |
| Mounting type | Wall Mount |
| Network Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth |
| Number Of Circuits | 6 |
| Number of Audio Channels | 5.1 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Power Source | Corded Electric |
| Product Features | Bluetooth, Wireless |
| Product Warranty | 2 Year Manufacturer |
| Speaker Size | 5.5 Centimetres |
| Speaker Type | Soundbar |
| Speaker maximum output power | 40 Watts |
| Specific Uses For Product | For home theater systems and portable devices such as smartphones and tablets |
| Subwoofer Connectivity Technology | Wired |
| Subwoofer Speaker Diameter | 6.7 Inches |
| Tweeter Diameter | 1 Inches |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |
| Warranty Type | Limited |
| Water Resistance Level | Not Water Resistant |
| Wireless Technology Type | Bluetooth |
A**X
Awesome Clear Sound Quality With Thunderous Earth Shaking Bass!
For the price, this is an awesome quality soundbar with woofer which has made a big difference to my LG OLED TV. Pros: - Easy fast set-up - just plug & play. Bluetooth phone connection was easy and very fast. - Very good clarity on voice + a dialogue enhancer for clearer speech - Deep Earth moving bass enough to wake up the dead! The floor and my ribs literally vibrated! N.b. Please check your neighbours aren't in before playing your favourite rock ballads! - Soundbar very slim & ergonomic. Fits under TV without obscuring picture. - Good build quality without cheap materials - Well packaged in protective foam Areas for Improvement - The controls on the remote would benefit from being lit up or at least painted luminously as it's impossible to see the control markings for the functions in low light. - The volume control isn't shown / indicated on the TV screen although the TV controller works and shows the volume on my LG OLED TV However, these are minor niggles and I'm very pleased with my purchase. Overall I think this is a quality sound bar and great value for money which I highly recommend.
A**R
Worth a buy!!!
I dont normally writes review but I bought this product based on the reviews so I might as well do one! I will keep it short and simple without any complicated technical words. I pay £178 on the sale price. For the brand ansld quality of the product I think is a bargain! It is literally plug and play obviously you have to connect the HDMI and bluetooth. I am no rookie with sound system. I used to have denon AVR 7.1 channel but is nit compatible with my latest samsung TV so instead of spending few humdreds to thousands for a new AVR.. I opted for sound bar with subwoofer! The sound is amazing you can definitely feel the bass, clear sound for music and films... defitnitely worth a buy.
R**R
Denon vs Majority vs JBL (vs Ultimea)
(notable update. I really can't figure out why a wireless sub is good - for the consumer. it still. needs. a. cable. and rather than a routable audio cable, it's now a chunky mains cable. also if you want to disconnect the sub, rather than just pulling the wire out of the soundbar, you need to unplug the sub from the mains. I can't see any advantage (for the end user) of this. maybe it has some for the manufacturer - and I can't see that it would be cost, because mains cable costs more than audio cable. doesn't it? plus a wireless sub will introduce some sort of lag. the only I can think of is that customers were mixing and matching subs to soundbars and damaging either the sub or the soundbar) I've realised a possible reason for the wireless. a wired soundbar with standard audio leads would have to have the sub amp within the soundbar. a wireless sub has the amp within the sub. so if the soundbar is a standalone product, a sub amp is needless (£) circuitry within the soundbar. so it isn't really for your benefit. actually another reason - audio cables can pick up interference pre amble I view soundbars as being for movies and television - I don't use them for music. soundbars for me are for a clear voice, and some bass thumps and resonance, but they don't have an open low/mid range for music. in the same way, my music speakers are slightly too boomy for speech - hence a soundbar. I'll give a maximum of 4 stars, because let's face it, do you pay any attention to the 5 star ratings? I only use them with the computer as the source (computer -> hdmi -> tv -> optical -> soundbar), so I always have an EQ for tweaking frequencies, and usually VLC player so I can change image/sound latency etc, which I find necessary for bluetooth which has a small delay. I prefer not using bluetooth because I have read (choose your favourite (un)official source) that the sound signal gets compressed/uncompressed at it is sent to a bluetooth device. my main spec for a soundbar is good quality of sound at low volumes, I rarely blast them. I want it to sound nice (speech, mids, bass), and not to be heard next door. I ended up trialling the Denon S316, the majority sierra plus, the JBL bar 2.1 deep bass mk2 and threw in the ultimea n50 for good measure. media tested: start of a new hope, Star destroyer overhead (brass instrument music, laser sounds, bass rumble) blade runner 2049, craft flying scene 12 mins in (rich bass music and thumps) matrix, some speech scenes and lobby fight (speech clarity/fullness and music/high pitched gun effects or booms) one or two random news interviews containing standard speech 20Hz-20kHz sweep youtube video Stereo media tested only, I can't comment on Dolby effects summary of audio: Denon £170 approx amazon - best for a warm/soft sound. slightly lacking in high end clarity (needs the EQ). speech sounds more natural at lower/medium volumes. subwoofer is reasonable. needs the EQ to take speech to the treble/clarity levels of the other two Majority £160 approx amazon - at low volumes slightly tinny (but clear) speech. at higher volumes speech seems less tinny and more rounded. subwoofer is bassy and addictive JBL £230 approx, different seller - for a brand name I was disappointed. very tinny speech. subwoofer is reasonable, better than denon but not as good as majority. I wonder if the tinny soundbar which may lack low to mids, causes the sub to sound more pronounced, hence the "deep bass" name. I'm not sure if this is end of line ultimea £110 approx amazon - very plucky contender. doesn't have the sound depth of the other 3, but for £110 is good value. very reasonable for voice and has an amount of depth from the sub summary of useability: Denon - has the worst control indication. it's just 5 LED's on the front, no indication of status of features. remote is full featured but has unpleasent squidgy buttons. when you change a setting, no indication of what has changed, just the blink of an LED on the front. has a complicated LED-combo system to tell you what the current setting is, you'll need the manual to decipher I emailed Denon about their sound settings (because the display doesn't tell you) and while Denon were extremely helpful, there was still some ambiguity about the settings. I *think* what they said was, upon factory switch on, a default setting is active (not movie night or music) and a default dialog setting is active (not 1/2/3). once you activate any of both of the 3, the only way to revert to either 4th default setting is a factory reset. Majority - has a good front display which tells you everything. remote is full featured and has nice buttons JBL - same sort of front display as the majority. remote has decent buttons but has very basic features ultimea - again same display as majority/JBL. remote has nice buttons and is fairly full featured "could it be that a non brand name wants to impress with features?" For my base line spec of a warm sound at quiet volume levels, the Denon suits best. that's at the cost of having a poor control display. as other people have said, needs treble EQ to boost voice clarity. the ultimea also serves as a compact system with speech with serviceable bass. the majority has addictive bass and I noticed things from the majority sub that I didn't notice with the others. at low volumes the majority bar is tinny (but clear), at higher volumes sounds slightly fuller/less tinny. the JBL has very few redeeming features to be honest. it isn't the best bass, the speech is shrill, the remote isn't full featured. in fact the only redeeming feature of the JBL is the control display. it's worth pointing out, if you're hard of hearing, the JBL might in fact be better. part of a soundsystem means that you can in principle make sound "more hearable" than the real thing - reproducing absolute natural might not be your goal. I think it's worth saying that all of these soundbar+sub combos probably lack open low-to-mids. they're all for speech with bass effects. I can tell you that because my edifier R1280DB's have open low mids. and aren't very good for speech - too boomy. other minor things - the ultimea volume buttons are up down, but the bass buttons are left/right. slightly un intuitive. those flutes on the side of the majority? as far as I can tell they arent ports, just plastic shapes. the three bigger products have wireless subs. why?? you still need a wire! you're just exchanging a routable/malleable audio wire for a heavy duty mains cable. the only reason I can think is so you can't mix and match subs from other systems....which is a pity, to be honest. plus not only that - the majority sub doesn't have a figure 8, it's hardwired. the denon's sparse information display and squidgy buttons is compounded by the fact that the LED's take 1-2 seconds after you've pressed the remote buttons to blink in acknowledgement that the button has been pressed. thankfully all of the 3 more expensive soundbars have the buttons on the top in the middle. the ultimea has them hidden at the end of the bar on the right. I don't know why. "you get convenient buttons only if you pay more"? I still prefer a rotary volume control and not +/- buttons. they all have +/- buttons I also did a 20Hz-20kHz sweep from a youtube video (all at flat response). The majority was the only one that gave the "lorry driving past furniture buzzing effect" at sub-100Hz. I'm sure you could EQ the majority if you wanted less sub resonance. The JBL had possibly slightly more "controlled" bass. The Denon was possibly less than the other two (because of a physically smaller sub enclosure) but acceptable. The JBL had quite a weak midrange (200-800Hz) and quite shrill higher (4.5kHz). for the Majority higher frequencies were less "painful" - fewer shrill resonant points than the JBL. The Denon probably had least clear mids and highers (or more "natural/soft" speech if you want) and would probably need EQ to boost above 1.5kHz. The JBL had some almost painful resonant upper frequencies (4.5kHz), with the Denon being "smoother" (and needing EQ above 1.5kHz). the Majority was stronger around the 500Hz mark than the JBL, which might explain why the JBL sounded markedly tinnier (as in, the JBL had less at the 500Hz midrange) Denon good for "natural smoothness", Majority better for clarity, JBL possibly for your average interview with a man on the street for the news or Coronation street the JBL will be going back. I'd never forgive myself for returning the "soft/warm" Denon, and the majority bass is addictive with the soundbar improving at louder volumes. the ultimea is also a good little piece of kit. I need to say the Ultimea was respectable at £110. if you are comparing the Ultimea at £150 with the other two at ~£160, I'd choose either of the other two. I'll also say the Majority Atlas soundbar at £30 is decent (not extensively tested) - the only thing I don't like about it is that it talks to you when you switch it on - and switching it off sets the volume to 0 (no separate power button) All of these 5 is best, except tinnyness where 5 is most tinny (or most clear/sharp/shrill speech) ________________remote button features remote buttons display sound qual bass clarity tinnyness ________________response_______________clickyness_____________(warmness) Majority________5_____________5________5______________5_______3.5_________5_____4.5____3.5 Denon__________3_____________4________2______________1_______4.5_________3.5___4______2 JBL_____________5_____________2________3______________5_______2.5_________4.5___5______5 Ultimea_________4_____________5________5______________5_______4___________3_____4______3
A**R
Great value and good sound!
I have two flat screen TVs in the house, one in the bedroom and the other in the ‘gym’. I have found modern TVs to be lacking when it comes to sound, often variable when streaming. Having done a bit of research I found this model which was attractive as I’ve I’ve used the brand before and there was a deal on the price. I didn’t want to commit to more expensive options not having used a sound bar previously. So I bought two. I’m really pleased. Easy to install and come with all you need. The sub is cableless and the end result looks good. Easy to control with the remote and the sound bar switches on and off with the TV. Both mine used ARC so only needed the hdmi cable, optical also included if that’s needed. Out of the box I found the sub to be very strong. This is easy to dial down with the remote. In the bedroom, with soft furnishings, that was enough. In the ‘gym’ the engineered floor and spare furnishings made the sub difficult to dial down sufficiently. I had a spare piece of flooring which the gym equipment sits on and cut a piece to go under the sub. Marvellous. I can also now hear high sounds and infill much better too. For example, bird song and an enhanced audio experience thinking of the chase scenes in the Bourne trilogy. I’m now looking at internet radio to Bluetooth to the bar.
A**Y
Great sound, easily compatible
Great sound quality and easy to use. Easily compatible sound system. Very happy with this
T**T
Simple and sounds great
I bought this Denon soundbar and sub when it was on offer at Amazon, I didn't read the description that well clearly as I was surprised when it turned up with a wireless subwoofer, especially for the money. Overall sound quality is fantastic and the adjustments for bass and dialogue clarity on the remote are useful. This has replaced a 10ish year old Yamaha 5.1 AV receiver and Morduant Short speaker system which was definitely far superior to this in terms of surround imaging (for obvious reasons) but even with the best setup and speaker positioning, this Denon actually makes for better sound quality and clarity and is absolutely not short on bass either. I have it connected via ARC, and generally use my Xbox Series X or Nvidia Shield Pro as sources. It gets on well with them and both automatically detected it over ARC too, and my Hisense TV directly controls the volume of the Denon. The Yamaha could be fussy with the order you turned equipment on but I'm pleased to say the Denon just works. All the time. Very pleased with my purchase and considering another for the bedroom! The ONLY negative thing I have to say is the remote control feels very cheap and not up to the standard of the rest of the system.
A**S
Impressive
Brilliant.. This..Is ‘All’ you need.. Enough Bass to fill most living rooms and give you that cinematic experience.. Can be adjusted with the various settings to your own taste in sound.. Suitably and surprisingly impressed..
S**T
Very easy to setup, great for dialogues terrible bass (even with sub woofer)
This thing is rated higher than the sound it produces! It is replacing a set of 12/15 year old Bose Companion Speakers. Those are old, don’t have remote and terrible standby power consumption! So I was looking to replace it with a Soundbar+Subwoofer combo! This set DTH S316, seemed like a good deal for the price. I had experienced Denon’s before and was hoping these would have better bass, but no. I am using Optical out from the TV since it does not support ARC. Positives: 1. great dialog enhancement! I can really hear dialogs clearly now. 2. Super easy to setup. The Subwoofer just works once you power it on! So “syncing” no setup, just works. Negatives: 1. midrange seems to crackle at times (this could be due to positioning, I have to play around a little more)! I watched Top Gun all over again to try and experience the roar of the engines and the title song, it was a bit disappointing tbh. 2. Bass is not enough, and definitely not earth shattering, at least in my living room. In conclusion the old Bose has more rounded sound output, even though it is not so great with dialogues. The smaller subwoofer in it definitely produces more bass. Unfortunately Bose don’t make decent speakers anymore, all they care for is how to suck up your data and sell it to third parties! So buy these if you are in a pinch or using them in a smallish room. Then they are more than adequate! 3.76 stars, so you could round it up to 4
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