Intext is well known for its budget speaker with optimized sound quality. Intex has a large variety of products, including a full-fledged range in speakers. We got Intex IT-Star 14000 SUF 4.1 channel speaker for review, meant for multimedia enjoyment. Let’s check it out.
Design and features
IT-Star 14000 SUF 4.1 speaker comes in a wooden body with a full plastic panel in the front encompassing certain design elements keeping in mind aesthetics and the look & feel. The subwoofer designed along colorful LED lights those looks beautifully and changes with music frequency. User-friendly features such as bass control, rotary volume knob on the front panel and large red LED power indicator enhances your listening experience.
The spectacular 4.1 channel speaker sports a USB port, SD card slot, and a built-in FM tuner. The speaker comes with AUX Audio input compatible with DVD/PC/LCD TV.
Performance
The speaker has a great and well-balanced sound profile and sounds really good even at unsafe volume levels. Most of the speakers we had encountered perform well at lower and mid-level volumes, but when you push things up, the speaker tends to distort at certain frequencies and the bass tends to get destroyed. However, with Intex IT-Star 14000 it doesn’t feel like it’s restricting itself the louder you play it.
On tracks with intense sub-bass content, like DJ Magic Mike’s “Feel The Bass,” the speaker pumped out flawless bass with a lot of oomph and detail. The mid and treble ranges are well-defined, and surprisingly, the vocals sound crisp and clear, even at low volume levels.
On tracks like Titanium by David Guetta which features dance club style beats, the speaker produced high fidelity sound with attacking bass and oomph, and sounded booming and bright making this melody truly pleasurable from starting to end. Sia’s vocals were clearly audible in between the bass of this electric pop song.
In piano number like Clair de Lune from Claude Debussy’s the XBoom Thunder produced as much silence as much sound without any hint of hissing or buzzing during these quiet times, with higher register strings, bass, and vocals maintaining their presence in the spotlight.