Upgrade your stereo and bring high-fidelity music streaming into your home with the Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your internet to stream from your favourite music service or direct from your music library. Hi-fidelity wireless streaming via Wi-Fi Low-latency streaming with no audio lag between speakers Digital output for premium high-definition audio Stream any song, in any room, any time Analogue and optical audio output Quick and easy setup Transform your stereo Upgrade the audio gear you already love and bring high-fidelity wireless music streaming into your home. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your Wi-Fi network to stream from your favourite music players or music library using your phone, tablet or computer. Expand your listening experience Control your music from anywhere in your home and play any song in any room. B-Fi is easy to set up, simple to control and features digital and analogue outputs for high-definition audio. And no matter how you listen, B-Fi audio quality will always be best-in-class.
Upgrade your stereo and bring high-fidelity music streaming into your home with the Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your internet to stream from your favourite music service or direct from your music library. Hi-fidelity wireless streaming via Wi-Fi Low-latency streaming with no audio lag between speakers Digital output for premium high-definition audio Stream any song, in any room, any time Analogue and optical audio output Quick and easy setup Transform your stereo Upgrade the audio gear you already love and bring high-fidelity wireless music streaming into your home. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your Wi-Fi network to stream from your favourite music players or music library using your phone, tablet or computer. Expand your listening experience Control your music from anywhere in your home and play any song in any room. B-Fi is easy to set up, simple to control and features digital and analogue outputs for high-definition audio. And no matter how you listen, B-Fi audio quality will always be best-in-class.
Upgrade your stereo and bring high-fidelity music streaming into your home with the Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your internet to stream from your favourite music service or direct from your music library. Hi-fidelity wireless streaming via Wi-Fi Low-latency streaming with no audio lag between speakers Digital output for premium high-definition audio Stream any song, in any room, any time Analogue and optical audio output Quick and easy setup Transform your stereo Upgrade the audio gear you already love and bring high-fidelity wireless music streaming into your home. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your Wi-Fi network to stream from your favourite music players or music library using your phone, tablet or computer. Expand your listening experience Control your music from anywhere in your home and play any song in any room. B-Fi is easy to set up, simple to control and features digital and analogue outputs for high-definition audio. And no matter how you listen, B-Fi audio quality will always be best-in-class.
Upgrade your stereo and bring high-fidelity music streaming into your home with the Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your internet to stream from your favourite music service or direct from your music library. Hi-fidelity wireless streaming via Wi-Fi Low-latency streaming with no audio lag between speakers Digital output for premium high-definition audio Stream any song, in any room, any time Analogue and optical audio output Quick and easy setup Transform your stereo Upgrade the audio gear you already love and bring high-fidelity wireless music streaming into your home. Connect B-Fi to any music system and your Wi-Fi network to stream from your favourite music players or music library using your phone, tablet or computer. Expand your listening experience Control your music from anywhere in your home and play any song in any room. B-Fi is easy to set up, simple to control and features digital and analogue outputs for high-definition audio. And no matter how you listen, B-Fi audio quality will always be best-in-class.
Last updated at 06/10/2026 07:12:47
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer (90032925)
Audioengine B Fi Multiroom Music Streamer 90032925 - Speakers/Audio Systems
Delivery $14.80
AUDIOENGINE B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer
7-day returns
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer
Free delivery between Thu – Fri
Audioengine B-Fi Wi-Fi Streamer
Delivery $6.99
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer Wireless Audio Adapter for Speaker
Free delivery between 16–23 June
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer
Delivery $10
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer
Delivery between 15–23 June $12.95
Audioengine B-Fi Multi-room Wi-Fi Music Streamer
Free delivery
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer
Delivery $9.95
originally posted on audioengineusa.com
Audioengine B-Fi is the best addition that I ever put on my restored 47 year old hi-fi receiver. The sound is hi-fi clean and clear. There was a slight app learning curve to get over in the beginning, and I wish the app could save internet radio stations (Youtube), but the incredible sonic tonality renditions through my stereo receiver are amazing to witness. I’m not just listening anymore. I’m feeling the performers talent at their best delivery, and through a medium of streaming that best unlocks the full potential of well designed electronic gear. Many thanks to Audioengine for this wonderful B-Fi product. I hope it lasts me many years of joyful use along with my vintage stereo. I’m even thinking of pairing another one to a 47 year old amplifier I’m now ... MoreAudioengine B-Fi is the best addition that I ever put on my restored 47 year old hi-fi receiver. The sound is hi-fi clean and clear. There was a slight app learning curve to get over in the beginning, and I wish the app could save internet radio stations (Youtube), but the incredible sonic tonality renditions through my stereo receiver are amazing to witness. I’m not just listening anymore. I’m feeling the performers talent at their best delivery, and through a medium of streaming that best unlocks the full potential of well designed electronic gear. Many thanks to Audioengine for this wonderful B-Fi product. I hope it lasts me many years of joyful use along with my vintage stereo. I’m even thinking of pairing another one to a 47 year old amplifier I’m now restoring. Having two of these paired up would be a home run. Thanks Audioengine for a great streamer! It’s a very fine hi-fi product. The music has breath — so real!
originally posted on audioengineusa.com
I think Audioengine hit the sweet spot between price and performance with the B-Fi streamer. I wanted to upgrade from bluetooth and right now you can either buy the cheaper wifi streamers that only have analog out (and cheap built-in DACs) or spend a lot more for units that have a digital out. The B-Fi is much more moderately priced than other higher-end streamers but still uses a high quality DAC for analog ouptut or toslink if you want to pass a digital signal to your source. Compared to the more expensive streamers you are giving up a built-in screen or readout but this is readily handled by the app if you need info on what is being played. You are also gaining a lot back in real estate because the B-Fi has a small form factor and can be placed almost anywhere. ... MoreI think Audioengine hit the sweet spot between price and performance with the B-Fi streamer. I wanted to upgrade from bluetooth and right now you can either buy the cheaper wifi streamers that only have analog out (and cheap built-in DACs) or spend a lot more for units that have a digital out. The B-Fi is much more moderately priced than other higher-end streamers but still uses a high quality DAC for analog ouptut or toslink if you want to pass a digital signal to your source. Compared to the more expensive streamers you are giving up a built-in screen or readout but this is readily handled by the app if you need info on what is being played. You are also gaining a lot back in real estate because the B-Fi has a small form factor and can be placed almost anywhere. I've been using the unit heavily for over a week now since I'm forced to work from home and am very impressed with it's performance. There are no dropouts or sound quality issues like I had been seeing with my previous bluetooth setup and I am more than satisfied with the great sound using both standard wifi and AIrPlay. The unit runs cool and is built like a tank and is backed by a great warranty so I am looking forward to many years of enjoyable listening!
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
I purchased this to allow my kids to stream our music library, ripped from CDs and stored on a Synology NAS, to an analog stereo system with an Onkyo receiver. I wanted to use it with iPod Touch devices that the kids use. We have the Synology DS Audio app streaming to two different Bluetooth speakers, and these work great, but I wanted an option to play through our stereo. I'm doing this because I _didn't_ want to use any streaming apps that involve cloud storage; we already have hundreds of losslessly-ripped CDs. This is to replace a feature that iTunes used to offer called Home Sharing in which you could share your entire library to other devices running iTunes on the same network. Apple Later Macs and MacOS versions Apple's Music app will still act as clients to ... MoreI purchased this to allow my kids to stream our music library, ripped from CDs and stored on a Synology NAS, to an analog stereo system with an Onkyo receiver. I wanted to use it with iPod Touch devices that the kids use. We have the Synology DS Audio app streaming to two different Bluetooth speakers, and these work great, but I wanted an option to play through our stereo. I'm doing this because I _didn't_ want to use any streaming apps that involve cloud storage; we already have hundreds of losslessly-ripped CDs. This is to replace a feature that iTunes used to offer called Home Sharing in which you could share your entire library to other devices running iTunes on the same network. Apple Later Macs and MacOS versions Apple's Music app will still act as clients to an older version of iTunes acting as a server, but iTunes is now obsolete and that feature is gone and so we won't be able to use it when my 2008 Mac Pro finally gives out; Apple wants everyone to use their paid cloud services instead. The packaging is quite nice and the unboxing experience is enjoyable. The device feels quite simple and solid. One minor disappointment: I'd have liked to see a replaceable antenna. I'm afraid that younger kids will break that right off and so I've tried to hide the box behind the stereo gear rather than putting it in a visible spot. Things get much less fun when it comes time to use the Audioengine app, which I installed on an iPhone 11 using iOS 15.4.1. I'm sorry to say that the app is quite primitive and hard to use. The dialogs contain typos and grammatical errors. One has to constantly jump back and forth between the app and the Wi-fi control panel. The guidance it gives is not very helpful. Even after failing to configure a device, it will show up in the list of connected devices, and there is no way to delete it or modify it; one has to (confusingly) add a new device. It lacks the common standard user-interface options like being able to slide a list entry to delete it. Renaming the device, actually works, and changes the AirPlay device name that is seen from iOS devices on the same network, but the name change doesn't show up in the app. After a successful firmware upgrade, the app continues to report that a .11 upgrade is available, but attempting to install it fails; it then says it is going to restart the device, but doesn't. Also, when the connection fails, it takes me to a screen telling me to push the reset button on the speaker, and there's a little picture of a reset button. There's just one problem - this device doesn't have such a button. So this is a generic app across other products, and a pretty poor one at that, giving a poor user experience. Fortunately once you get the device configured on the WiFi network, you can ignore the app and use the iOS control center (a bit tricky, swipe down and left from the upper right corner) to select the AirPlay audio destination. I was first trying to connect the Audioengine device to our main network, which is a Netgear mesh system with two satellites, and works great for us with multiple Linux, MacOS, and iOS devices. It is a hybrid 2.4 and 5GHz router, and the Audioengine requires 2.4GHz. It would not connect to the network, despite multiple tries. So, I tried instead to connect it to a T-Mobile network appliance that I use as a backup Internet connection for when our cable XFinity cable modem drops, which is a pretty common occurrence. It connected immediately to the T-Mobile device. I finally figured out, not from any of the company's FAQs or troubleshooting guides which are quite poor but by experimenting, that the device won't connect to the Netgear router if it is configured to use WPA3-Personal authentication. I had to downgrade the security setting to the older WPA2-Personal authentication protocol to get it to work. But, after that, it did connect. One final note: so far the device seems pretty robust against dropouts, but it seems that the way it does this is to maintain a large audio buffer, several seconds of audio. This makes it slightly confusing to use because when hitting stop or changing tracks, there is a delay of several seconds while the buffered audio continues to play before changing. Overall, I'm not returning it, since it works, sounds fine, and I like the fact that it provides a simple function and doesn't require using any cloud services. But vendors should make sure that if their devices require apps, the app provides a good user experience, and this one definitely doesn't.
| DAC | ES9023 16-Bit, 192 kHz |
| Processor | ARM AP8064 |
| Sample Rate | 32 to 192 kHz |
| Bit Depth | 16 Bit |
| Wi-Fi | 2.4 GHz 802.11a/b |
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer (90032925)
Audioengine B Fi Multiroom Music Streamer 90032925 - Speakers/Audio Systems
Delivery $14.80
AUDIOENGINE B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer
7-day returns
Audioengine B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer
Free delivery between Thu – Fri
Audioengine B-Fi Wi-Fi Streamer
Delivery $6.99
Audioengine B-Fi is the best addition that I ever put on my restored 47 year old hi-fi receiver. The sound is hi-fi clean and clear. There was a slight app learning curve to get over in the beginning, and I wish the app could save internet radio stations (Youtube), but the incredible sonic tonality renditions through my stereo receiver are amazing to witness. I’m not just listening anymore. I’m feeling the performers talent at their best delivery, and through a medium of streaming that best unlocks the full potential of well designed electronic gear. Many thanks to Audioengine for this wonderful B-Fi product. I hope it lasts me many years of joyful use along with my vintage stereo. I’m even thinking of pairing another one to a 47 year old amplifier I’m now ... MoreAudioengine B-Fi is the best addition that I ever put on my restored 47 year old hi-fi receiver. The sound is hi-fi clean and clear. There was a slight app learning curve to get over in the beginning, and I wish the app could save internet radio stations (Youtube), but the incredible sonic tonality renditions through my stereo receiver are amazing to witness. I’m not just listening anymore. I’m feeling the performers talent at their best delivery, and through a medium of streaming that best unlocks the full potential of well designed electronic gear. Many thanks to Audioengine for this wonderful B-Fi product. I hope it lasts me many years of joyful use along with my vintage stereo. I’m even thinking of pairing another one to a 47 year old amplifier I’m now restoring. Having two of these paired up would be a home run. Thanks Audioengine for a great streamer! It’s a very fine hi-fi product. The music has breath — so real!
I think Audioengine hit the sweet spot between price and performance with the B-Fi streamer. I wanted to upgrade from bluetooth and right now you can either buy the cheaper wifi streamers that only have analog out (and cheap built-in DACs) or spend a lot more for units that have a digital out. The B-Fi is much more moderately priced than other higher-end streamers but still uses a high quality DAC for analog ouptut or toslink if you want to pass a digital signal to your source. Compared to the more expensive streamers you are giving up a built-in screen or readout but this is readily handled by the app if you need info on what is being played. You are also gaining a lot back in real estate because the B-Fi has a small form factor and can be placed almost anywhere. ... MoreI think Audioengine hit the sweet spot between price and performance with the B-Fi streamer. I wanted to upgrade from bluetooth and right now you can either buy the cheaper wifi streamers that only have analog out (and cheap built-in DACs) or spend a lot more for units that have a digital out. The B-Fi is much more moderately priced than other higher-end streamers but still uses a high quality DAC for analog ouptut or toslink if you want to pass a digital signal to your source. Compared to the more expensive streamers you are giving up a built-in screen or readout but this is readily handled by the app if you need info on what is being played. You are also gaining a lot back in real estate because the B-Fi has a small form factor and can be placed almost anywhere. I've been using the unit heavily for over a week now since I'm forced to work from home and am very impressed with it's performance. There are no dropouts or sound quality issues like I had been seeing with my previous bluetooth setup and I am more than satisfied with the great sound using both standard wifi and AIrPlay. The unit runs cool and is built like a tank and is backed by a great warranty so I am looking forward to many years of enjoyable listening!
I purchased this to allow my kids to stream our music library, ripped from CDs and stored on a Synology NAS, to an analog stereo system with an Onkyo receiver. I wanted to use it with iPod Touch devices that the kids use. We have the Synology DS Audio app streaming to two different Bluetooth speakers, and these work great, but I wanted an option to play through our stereo. I'm doing this because I _didn't_ want to use any streaming apps that involve cloud storage; we already have hundreds of losslessly-ripped CDs. This is to replace a feature that iTunes used to offer called Home Sharing in which you could share your entire library to other devices running iTunes on the same network. Apple Later Macs and MacOS versions Apple's Music app will still act as clients to ... MoreI purchased this to allow my kids to stream our music library, ripped from CDs and stored on a Synology NAS, to an analog stereo system with an Onkyo receiver. I wanted to use it with iPod Touch devices that the kids use. We have the Synology DS Audio app streaming to two different Bluetooth speakers, and these work great, but I wanted an option to play through our stereo. I'm doing this because I _didn't_ want to use any streaming apps that involve cloud storage; we already have hundreds of losslessly-ripped CDs. This is to replace a feature that iTunes used to offer called Home Sharing in which you could share your entire library to other devices running iTunes on the same network. Apple Later Macs and MacOS versions Apple's Music app will still act as clients to an older version of iTunes acting as a server, but iTunes is now obsolete and that feature is gone and so we won't be able to use it when my 2008 Mac Pro finally gives out; Apple wants everyone to use their paid cloud services instead. The packaging is quite nice and the unboxing experience is enjoyable. The device feels quite simple and solid. One minor disappointment: I'd have liked to see a replaceable antenna. I'm afraid that younger kids will break that right off and so I've tried to hide the box behind the stereo gear rather than putting it in a visible spot. Things get much less fun when it comes time to use the Audioengine app, which I installed on an iPhone 11 using iOS 15.4.1. I'm sorry to say that the app is quite primitive and hard to use. The dialogs contain typos and grammatical errors. One has to constantly jump back and forth between the app and the Wi-fi control panel. The guidance it gives is not very helpful. Even after failing to configure a device, it will show up in the list of connected devices, and there is no way to delete it or modify it; one has to (confusingly) add a new device. It lacks the common standard user-interface options like being able to slide a list entry to delete it. Renaming the device, actually works, and changes the AirPlay device name that is seen from iOS devices on the same network, but the name change doesn't show up in the app. After a successful firmware upgrade, the app continues to report that a .11 upgrade is available, but attempting to install it fails; it then says it is going to restart the device, but doesn't. Also, when the connection fails, it takes me to a screen telling me to push the reset button on the speaker, and there's a little picture of a reset button. There's just one problem - this device doesn't have such a button. So this is a generic app across other products, and a pretty poor one at that, giving a poor user experience. Fortunately once you get the device configured on the WiFi network, you can ignore the app and use the iOS control center (a bit tricky, swipe down and left from the upper right corner) to select the AirPlay audio destination. I was first trying to connect the Audioengine device to our main network, which is a Netgear mesh system with two satellites, and works great for us with multiple Linux, MacOS, and iOS devices. It is a hybrid 2.4 and 5GHz router, and the Audioengine requires 2.4GHz. It would not connect to the network, despite multiple tries. So, I tried instead to connect it to a T-Mobile network appliance that I use as a backup Internet connection for when our cable XFinity cable modem drops, which is a pretty common occurrence. It connected immediately to the T-Mobile device. I finally figured out, not from any of the company's FAQs or troubleshooting guides which are quite poor but by experimenting, that the device won't connect to the Netgear router if it is configured to use WPA3-Personal authentication. I had to downgrade the security setting to the older WPA2-Personal authentication protocol to get it to work. But, after that, it did connect. One final note: so far the device seems pretty robust against dropouts, but it seems that the way it does this is to maintain a large audio buffer, several seconds of audio. This makes it slightly confusing to use because when hitting stop or changing tracks, there is a delay of several seconds while the buffered audio continues to play before changing. Overall, I'm not returning it, since it works, sounds fine, and I like the fact that it provides a simple function and doesn't require using any cloud services. But vendors should make sure that if their devices require apps, the app provides a good user experience, and this one definitely doesn't.
I’m using this to bring hi-res streaming to my very basic, very nice entry-level Yamaha receiver. (Everyone probably knows the model.) Its got Bluetooth but no Wi-Fi and no real DAC. I managed to score some outstanding Klipsch RP600m speakers…and I wanted to hear them with better electronics without springing for high end amplification. Hence, enter the B-Fi. Verdict: significant improvement. I’ll probably move up to an audiophile-grade integrated amp at some point…but now I don’t need on board Wi-Fi…and I can bypass the signal straight to the amp’s DAC if it seems higher performance than the scaled back DAC signal from the B-Fi. For now, I’m enjoying hires audio with a plain vanilla receiver. Very cool.
I’ve been downloading hi-res files from a number of sources over the past few years and at an average of $17 a pop it gets expensive. I subscribe to Qobuz streaming because of their extensive classical and jazz catalogs and have been searching for an economical way to stream through my home audio system. Enter the B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer! I can now stream Qobuz at hi-res quality and have access to a ton of music. Suddenly paying for downloads is less appealing. Setting up the B-Fi was simple and the sound quality is outstanding. You control the unit through an app and while I’m still finding my way around it–I’ve only been using the B-Fi for a few hours–it is relatively easy to use. For my wife’s listening needs–lots of K-pop and folk–we switch over to ... MoreI’ve been downloading hi-res files from a number of sources over the past few years and at an average of $17 a pop it gets expensive. I subscribe to Qobuz streaming because of their extensive classical and jazz catalogs and have been searching for an economical way to stream through my home audio system. Enter the B-Fi Multiroom Music Streamer! I can now stream Qobuz at hi-res quality and have access to a ton of music. Suddenly paying for downloads is less appealing. Setting up the B-Fi was simple and the sound quality is outstanding. You control the unit through an app and while I’m still finding my way around it–I’ve only been using the B-Fi for a few hours–it is relatively easy to use. For my wife’s listening needs–lots of K-pop and folk–we switch over to Pandora. Switching between Qobuz and Pandora is a little funky–you have to log out of one platform before switching on to the other–but once you get the hang of it pretty easy. Initially I had no need for the B-Fi’s multiroom function, but now considering wireless speakers for other rooms. It looks like the thousands and thousands of CDs I have–I’m not making this up–are more like relics. Downloads? Only from those labels that are not on the Qobuz platform.
I got the B-Fi WiFi hoping to connect Audioengine A5+ speakers in my kitchen to stream in sync with a stereo in the dining room, replacing the nearly identical and fantastic B1 Bluetooth streamer that's been running in my kitchen for the last couple of years. Like others before me, I'd assumed that 'works with AirPlay' would include AirPlay 2. That the B-Fi doesn't support AirPlay2 is my only issue with it. I gave it a workout with a number of decent stereo setups and it absolutely held its own, streaming high quality music from Tidal, Spotify and my computer with great detail. When paired with the Audioengine A5+ and a couple of of good integrated amps and respectable speakers, there was no noticeable difference compared to other streamers I have that cost about ... MoreI got the B-Fi WiFi hoping to connect Audioengine A5+ speakers in my kitchen to stream in sync with a stereo in the dining room, replacing the nearly identical and fantastic B1 Bluetooth streamer that's been running in my kitchen for the last couple of years. Like others before me, I'd assumed that 'works with AirPlay' would include AirPlay 2. That the B-Fi doesn't support AirPlay2 is my only issue with it. I gave it a workout with a number of decent stereo setups and it absolutely held its own, streaming high quality music from Tidal, Spotify and my computer with great detail. When paired with the Audioengine A5+ and a couple of of good integrated amps and respectable speakers, there was no noticeable difference compared to other streamers I have that cost about three times as much. Only with an audiophile setup where I listened critically could I hear some limitations, but if I wasn't comparing this carefully I would have struggled to find fault. Setup was easy, the app is intuitive, and voice prompts (English) when hooking things up is a nice touch. If you're looking for a standalone streamer or will commit to Audioengine for multiroom WiFi streaming, this offers great value for the money.
Connected this to a Marantz pm-6007 with B&W 606 S2 speakers and B&W ASW610 subwoofer. Was easy for me to setup the WiFi (I have a tri band WiFi 6 though this only connects to 2.4 GHz). So far the only source I have tested this on is Spotify Premium at highest setting. Playing from an iPhone, I compared the sound quality with a high end bluetooth 5 receiver and definitely this B-Fi is noticeably better (I used the DAC of the amp for both). With my ears and the above setup, there is hardly any difference between the B-Fi and a direct-wired iPhone connected to the amp via the apple 24bit lightning audio connector. So far I like it very much. Hopefully the music will get better when I use higher quality source materials.
Im an apple ecosystem user, and this does allow me to play music wirelessly through the one set of speakers connected to it. However it is not fully featured airplay, with the main difference being that I can’t add these speakers as part of a multi-room set up: I can't play music via this device and through a HomePod mini in another room, for instance. It’s either these speakers by themselves, or some combination of my other fully compatible airplay speakers, but not these speakers together with the others. Also, and this is more minor, but there is more delay between controlling my music (iOS; Apple Music) and that taking affect on the speakers. Pressing play takes a touch longer to result in music playing and the same thing applies with skipping tracks and ... MoreIm an apple ecosystem user, and this does allow me to play music wirelessly through the one set of speakers connected to it. However it is not fully featured airplay, with the main difference being that I can’t add these speakers as part of a multi-room set up: I can't play music via this device and through a HomePod mini in another room, for instance. It’s either these speakers by themselves, or some combination of my other fully compatible airplay speakers, but not these speakers together with the others. Also, and this is more minor, but there is more delay between controlling my music (iOS; Apple Music) and that taking affect on the speakers. Pressing play takes a touch longer to result in music playing and the same thing applies with skipping tracks and stopping etc. All these things are fine for me as my current set up is stand-alone in my office, but if I wanted this device as part of a whole house system my rating would be lower.
This device met my needs exactly. It sounds great, was easy to set up—though a bit unusual with the “voice” prompts—and is easily kept out of sight behind my equipment. Not that it’s unattractive in any way, just that it’s so small and simple there’s no need to display it. I’m using it as an AirPlay target for listening to music when I don’t have the CD or vinyl of what I want to listen to. Would be nice to have the “Hey Siri” ability, but not a deal-breaker for me. I just use my phone or tablet to redirect.
I replaced a small computer (NUC) which was driving my whole house speaker system through a multichannel amp with the B-Fi. I have the analog output of the B-Fi connected to the audio-in of the amp. I now have better sound and more volume on the in house ceiling and outdoor speakers. It shows up in the "Select a device" list on the Spotify app and after you set up the B-Fi you can delete the Audioengine Control app if you no longer want to use it. A nice feature is that you can rename the B-Fi so now my wife can just look for "House Speakers" instead of asking me every time what device to select. Wish I had known about it sooner.
| DAC | ES9023 16-Bit, 192 kHz |
| Processor | ARM AP8064 |
| Sample Rate | 32 to 192 kHz |
| Bit Depth | 16 Bit |
| Wi-Fi | 2.4 GHz 802.11a/b |