10 Ways to Elevate Your Outdoor Sound System for Summer

· Lifehacker

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Picture this scene: It’s a summer backyard party. The weather's perfect, and everyone showed up. The blender’s full of rum and sugar water, tiki torches flicker in the breeze, and a full moon glows over the lawn. You cue up some old-school Chaka Khan, but the music that oozes out of that little Bluetooth speaker is weak. Tinny. Wind-compromised. It sounds like a party dying. Do not let this happen to you. Decent outdoor audio doesn’t just make music louder—it sets the vibe and saves the day.

How to choose between an outdoor wired sound system or simple Bluetooth

The first step when planning how you're going to rock that July 4 party is choosing whether you're hardwiring your yard or keeping it mobile. You probably already know what kind of person you are, but below is a case for each approach.

The case for a wired system: If you want pristine audiophile-style fidelity, run physical wires from your indoor system. It will sound better, you won't have to worry about batteries dying, and you can tinker with things like speaker placement and EQ all summer to get it set up perfectly.

The case for Bluetooth speakers: Yeah, a wired array of expensive speakers will provide better sound to your patio, but let’s be real: most of us just want some tunes to back up a summertime party, and a battery-powered, portable Bluetooth speaker playing straight from your phone is enough. It's cheaper, much less hassle, and you can take a Bluetooth speaker anywhere.

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Now that you've decided that, here are suggestions for both setups.

Multiple speakers are a must for wired outdoor sound systems

A couple of cabinets and a sub are great for indoor listening, but outside, you're contending with wind, environmental weirdness, and a lack of sound reflective surfaces. Using multiple speakers will give you much better sound coverage without requiring you to blast the volume and anger your neighbors.

These are the best ways to position your outdoor wired speakers

Corners are good: For the best acoustic results, mount your speakers in corners where two walls (or a wall and a solid fence) meet. The surfaces will reflect the sound toward listeners, boosting volume and bass.

Elevate them to ear level: Speakers that are roughly the level of your listeners' ears will work better than leaving them on the ground. Speakers on the ground are sending some of their bass and mid frequencies into your lawn.

Account for the wind: The wind is fickle, but if there's a direction it usually blows in your backyard, position speakers upwind from listeners, so less music gets "blown away."

Keep the backyard aesthetic by hiding outdoor speakers

If you don't want bulky audio equipment clashing with your landscaping, you can always go with stealth gear. OSD Audio has a ton of outdoor speakers that look like rocks and tasteful design elements, speakers you can hang on trees, subwoofers you can bury in the ground, and other gear for a hidden set-up.

Choose "mono" over "stereo" when using outdoor wired speakers

Stereo separation—splitting different parts of a track between left and right channels—sounds great when you are centered between two speakers in a living room, but it usually falls apart outside, where guests are milling about and environmental factors might mute half of the mix. To fix this, switch your audio receiver/amplifier output to Mono, ensuring that every speaker in your yard plays all of the song.

The same "mono is better" rule applies if you're using multiple Bluetooth speakers, too. You can go to Settings > Accessibility > Audio & Visual and toggle on Mono Audio on iPhones, and do the same for Androids at Settings > Accessibility > Hearing enhancements.

Adjust the EQ on your outdoor wired speakers

The low-end frequencies are the first casualty of an open yard, leaving your music sounding hollow. Manually adjust your equalizer to account for the environment. Give the bass and treble a boost (or twiddle the knobs until you have the right mix for your outdoor audio situation).

For Bluetooth speakers, be sure to point the driver at the crowd

Some speakers, like the Ultimate Ears Boom 4 or The Disc: Bang & Olufsen Beosound A1, look like cylinders or discs that are designed to throw sound in all directions equally. But the drivers and tweeters actually face a specific direction. Which direction is "front" depends on the speaker, but there's almost always some indication. Point the front toward your guests.

Create a DIY amplifier for outdoor Bluetooth speakers

If you need more volume but your speaker is maxed out, look for a rigid container like an empty ceramic flower pot or a glass mixing bowl, and put your speaker into it. It acts like a megaphone and boosts the volume. (Try to ignore the pained sigh of your audiophile brother-in-law. Yes, this does muddy up the audio mix in a big way, but when you just need pure volume to carry across a loud backyard, it gets the job done.)

Take your Bluetooth playlist offline

To ensure the tunes don't end because of internet issues, save your playlist to your phone or laptop before the party.

Use a power station so your Bluetooth speakers keep playing well into the night

If things are going to go late, consider a portable power station like the Ecoflow 2 or the Jackery Explorer 300.

Use a "host device" to avoid Bluetooth signal drop

Bluetooth range gets significantly worse outdoors with open air and bodies blocking the signal. Instead of streaming from your personal phone, use an old, deactivated smartphone or a tablet as a dedicated "host" device. Leave it physically sitting near the speakers (or safely tucked in a ziplock bag nearby), and use Spotify or Apple Music's "Group Session" or "Remote Control" feature from your actual phone to change tracks from across the yard without moving the source.

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