Trusted Reviews is supported by its audience. If you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a commission. Learn more.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CD Review

Verdict

rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star

Pros

  • Crisp, detailed presentation and decent soundstage width
  • Slick, versatile multiroom streaming
  • Curvy, low-profile design
  • Wide range of playback sources

Cons

  • Underwhelming bass
  • Lacks punch and authority
  • Limited streaming services
  • Real-time CD ripping

Key Specifications

  • Review Price: £369.99
  • 40W LincsD-AMP amplifier
  • Dual-band Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
  • Qualcomm AllPlay multiroom platform
  • CD, Bluetooth & USB re-streaming
  • CD ripping to 4GB built-in memory
  • Panasonic Music Streaming app
  • Hi-res audio support

What is the Panasonic SC-ALL7CD?

The SC-ALL7CD is a compact audio system from Panasonic’s ALL multiroom range, offering network, CD, Bluetooth and USB playback, alongside DAB/DAB+ and FM radio tuners.

Link it up with other speakers in the range – such as the SC-ALL05 and SC-ALL6 – and you can send music around the house with Panasonic’s Music Streaming app. But the best part is that you can also re-stream any source from the SC-ALL7CD to other ALL speakers, including CD, Bluetooth and USB. With 4GB of on-board memory, you can even rip and store up to 25 CDs on the unit itself.

It’s a Swiss Army audio system, but the sound could be a little better.

Related: Best Bluetooth Speakers
Panasonic SC-ALL7CDPanasonic SC-ALL7CD speaker system on white background.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CD – Design and Connections

With its gloss black finish and alluring curves, the SC-ALL7CD is a great-looking system. It’s fairly wide for a so-called compact system, but it sits nice and low on a tabletop and tapers towards the back. The slim, pill-shaped front panel is embellished by a chrome trim, framing the fine-mesh aluminium grille. It really catches the eye
 
Behind the grille is a large, easy-to-read dot-matrix display, which shows the selected input. It stays there all the time, but you can dim it using a button on the remote. The CD tray is located below the display. That feels a little flimsy, but build quality is generally solid.

Sheltered beneath the main body is a control panel, offering volume and playback buttons, a 3.5mm headphone jack and a USB port. A row of touch-sensitive controls is located on top of the unit, including input selection and five Favourite keys that store albums or radio stations.

With so many sources on-board, the lack of physical sockets comes as no surprise. There’s an Ethernet port to connect the unit to a router and a DAB antenna, but that’s it. There’s no a 3.5mm input, which would have been useful for non-wireless devices.Panasonic SC-ALL7CDPanasonic SC-ALL7CD hi-fi system front view.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CD – Features

Equipped with dual-band Wi-Fi (2.4GHz/5GHz), the SC-ALL7CD forms part of a multiroom system with other Panasonic ALL speakers using the Qualcomm AllPlay platform. It’s controlled using the Panasonic’s Music Streaming App for iOS and Android.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CDWoman using tablet with Panasonic SC-ALL7CD speaker on shelf.

The app lets you access music stored on PCs and NAS drives, or stream it from Napster or Spotify. Internet radio comes courtesy of Aupeo Personal Radio and AllPlay Radio. It’s hardly a generous selection – there’s no Deezer or Tidal – but the presence of Spotify should suffice for most users. Note that you’ll need a premium account to use Spotify Connect.

You can perform all the usual multiroom tricks such as playing the same song through the entire system or sending different songs/sources to each speaker. But the nifty part is that you can also re-stream CDs, Bluetooth or USB from the SC-ALL7CD to other connected ALL speakers. It’s a handy feature if you haven’t got round to ripping your CDs and want to listen to them in rooms without a player.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CDPanasonic SC-ALL7CD Hi-Fi system front view on white background.
If you don’t want to keep loading discs then you can rip your favourite ones to the unit’s built-in 4GB memory. That’s enough to store five CDs in high-quality WAV, or up to 25 CDs in 320kbps MP3. There are two recording modes: HQ 1-CD and Multi-CD. In HQ you can store one CD as WAV in each of the five Favourite presets, while Multi-CD lets you rip five CDs to each preset in MP3. You have to commit to one or the other – you can’t rip WAV and MP3 to the same preset.

It’s a nice idea, but not a quick process. The unit rips them in real-time, so you have to listen to the album all the way through. That’s no great hardship but takes longer than fast-ripping on a PC.

As the gold badge on the box confirms, the SC-ALL7CD plays hi-res music, including FLAC and WAV up to 192kHz/24-bit.

On-board speaker tech includes a pair of 6.5cm full-range drivers with nano-sized bamboo cones and two 4cm tweeters that hit a high-frequency response of 50kHz. They’re driven by Panasonic’s third-generation LincsD-AMP amplifier, which provides 40W of power. A twisted acoustic port aids bass reproduction within the compact cabinet.

True to form, Panasonic provides plenty of audio modes to play with. There are five EQ presets (Heavy, Soft, Clear, Vocal, Flat), bass and treble adjustments (-4 to +4) and three My Sound presets to store your settings. Dynamic Bass, Surround and Clear-Mode Dialog complete the package.  

Panasonic SC-ALL7CD – Setup and Operation

Operating the SC-ALL7CD without the app is ridiculously easy. The top and front-panel controls cover most bases and there’s an excellent remote in the box too. Phones make terrific remotes, but not when they die or lock you out. Multiroom speakers that also supply a physical remote always earn brownie points.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CDPanasonic SC-ALL7CD player on table with people dining in background.

The chunky rubber buttons are clearly labelled and logically organised. Hit the Mix Play button and the Panasonic will shuffle tracks stored in the memory. The Sound and Setup buttons bring up the respective menus on the unit’s front panel – just use the direction keys to make your tweaks. Easy. My only complaint is that the volume controls aren’t more prominent.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CD – Music Streaming App

Adding the SC-ALL7CD to your network is equally simple. Just plug it in, tell the app to find your speaker and transfer your Wi-Fi password. It worked first time, without any blips.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CDScreenshots of Panasonic SC-ALL7CD's music streaming interface.

Panasonic’s Music Streaming app is one of the best multiroom apps I’ve tested. Streamlined menus, simple icons and welcoming colours make it a pleasure to navigate. Whether you’re moving between menus, scrolling through a big library or playing a track, everything happens instantly.   

The Browse menu lists available sources, including NAS drives, PCs, streaming services and radio apps. You can add or remove services you don’t use. Further down is a list of sources that can be re-streamed.

During playback you can move between the various menus simply by tapping the relevant part of the screen. The Now Playing screen uses album art as a background and provides comprehensive playback controls.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CDScreenshots of Panasonic SC-ALL7CD speaker system interface.

Tap the speaker icon at the top and a list of connected ALL speakers slides in from the side. Helpfully, each one is assigned a different colour and can be easily renamed. To group speakers together, simply drag and drop them onto each other – the boxes link together and display the playback source in the middle.  

I teamed the SC-ALL7CD with Panasonic’s SC-ALL6 and ALL5 and tried out a variety of streaming scenarios – the system took them all in its stride. The re-streaming feature works well too, playing my CDs and Bluetooth devices through all three speakers in perfect synchronicity.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CD – Performance

First impressions are generally positive, but it isn’t the slam-dunk I’d hoped for. The SC-ALL7CD offers a crisp, clear sound with detailed high frequencies that bring regular and hi-res tracks to life. Guitars have a well-defined twang, while hi-hats tick along to the rhythm accurately. It’s a lively and precise sound; easy on the ears but with enough bite to keep boredom at bay.

Also impressive is the ALL7CD’s spacious soundstage. The wide cabinet allows the drivers to be placed fairly far apart, resulting in an decent spread of sound. It opens up even further when you activate the Surround mode, although it exaggerates the treble.

The sound isn’t dense or congested – instruments and vocals are nicely separated and well organised. Kandace Springs’ soulful tones on “Thought It Would Be Easier” sound lovely; there’s a breathy texture to her voice, helping it stand out among the shuffling percussion and agile piano lines. The Panasonic also picks out the leading edge of double bass notes.

Plenty of positives then, but sadly the SC-ALL7CD doesn’t quite hit the spot in other areas. Despite the best efforts of the twisted acoustic port, its underwhelming bass reproduction results in a rather small, lightweight sound that lacks authority.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CDTwo people with Panasonic SC-ALL7CD speaker on a table.

I spent a lot of time fiddling with the sound modes and tone controls to find the right balance, and that’s never a good sign. While playing “Points” by James Blake, which repeats a big descending bass note, only the Heavy preset comes close to reaching the levels of weight and body required.

All the other modes – Clear, Flat, Soft, Vocal – sound thin and unbalanced. Activating Dynamic Bass and increasing the Bass level to +2 or +3 helps in each case, but it sounds forced and muddy when you start pushing the volume up high. You can find a perfectly enjoyable balance, but the wow factor just isn’t there.

It’s a shame, because otherwise the SC-ALL7CD has all the makings of a killer sound system. It certainly isn’t a disaster, but those who crave a deep, full-bodied sound with thumping bass should seek their sonic thrills elsewhere.

Panasonic SC-ALL7CDPerson using Panasonic SC-ALL7CD home audio system

Should I buy the Panasonic SC-ALL7CD?

In most respects, the SC-ALL7CD is an excellent all-in-one system that does enough to justify the price tag. It plays music from almost any source and streams it around the house with consummate ease via Panasonic’s superb smartphone app.

It’s ridiculously easy to use and boasts nifty features such as CD ripping and re-streaming. Throw in a slim, curvy design and you have all the makings of a must-buy.

Sadly, aspects of the system’s sound quality deny it top marks. Underwhelming bass reproduction left me cold; it needs more weight and authority to match the best systems at this price. On a more positive note, the Panasonic delivers a lively, open and detailed sound with terrific width and clear vocals.

Verdict

A stylish, versatile all-in-one audio system with some nifty features that’s let down by underwhelming bass output.

Trusted Score

rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star rating-star

Score in detail

  • Design 8
  • Sound Quality 7
  • Features 8
  • Value 7
  • Usability 8

Storage

Internal Storage (Gigabyte) 4GB

Audio Codecs

MP3 Yes
Apple Lossless No
AIFF Yes
WAV Yes
AAC Yes

Why trust our journalism?

Founded in 2003, Trusted Reviews exists to give our readers thorough, unbiased and independent advice on what to buy.

Today, we have millions of users a month from around the world, and assess more than 1,000 products a year.

author icon

Editorial independence

Editorial independence means being able to give an unbiased verdict about a product or company, with the avoidance of conflicts of interest. To ensure this is possible, every member of the editorial staff follows a clear code of conduct.

author icon

Professional conduct

We also expect our journalists to follow clear ethical standards in their work. Our staff members must strive for honesty and accuracy in everything they do. We follow the IPSO Editors’ code of practice to underpin these standards.

Trusted Reviews Logo

Sign up to our newsletter

Get the best of Trusted Reviews delivered right to your inbox.

This is a test error message with some extra words