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JVC

JVC EXOFIELD Theater Personal Home Theater System, 7.1.4 Multi-Channel Surround Sound , XP-EXT1

  • Based on 29 reviews
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$699.00 Why this price?

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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Friday, May 24
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Features

  • JVC's own EXOFIELD sound field procressing techology reproduces multi-channel audio (7.1.4 channels)
  • Enjoy audio formats such as Dolby Atmos and DTS: X for a realistic sound field comparable to listening to a multi-channel speaker system
  • Supports Up-mixing of 2-ch and 5.1-ch material to 7.1.4 channels
  • Dedicated EXOFIELD Smartphone App for measuring personal characteristics via microphones built-in to the headphones
  • The digital sound processor and headphones are connected through 2.4/5GHz dual band digital wireless transmission

Product Dimensions: 6.06 x 10.47 x 1.18 inches


Item Weight: 0.01 ounces


Item model number: XPEXT1


Batteries: 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: May 28, 2020


Manufacturer: JVC


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, May 24

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Sound is Awesome but Extremely expensive for something that relies heavily on an App.
Review for Jvc xp-ext1 MY AV COMPONENTS: HDMI CABLES: Zeskit Maya 8K 48Gbps Certified Ultra High Speed TV: Sony X900H AVR: Denon X2700H 4K BLURAY PLAYER: Sony UBP-X700 Roku Ultra Xbox One DISCLAIMER: I am a consumer that needed a late night headphone system that delivered a Dolby Atmos/DTS:X simulation solution. This review is a reflection of such needs. If you do not already have an AVR and necessary components capable of the Dolby Atmos and DTS:X “3D Surround Sound” your experience may be different than what is presented below. THE GOOD: These headphones sound awesome, feel well constructed, and do reproduce the Dolby Atmos/ DTS:X “3D Sound'' with the appropriate content. The LFE channel is very evident and the headphones produce some throbbing booming bass. I viewed some Dolby Atmos demo content and did experience the 3D audio surround effects. I watched the Lost World 4K for DTS:X and Rogue One 4K for the Dolby Atmos experience. Although these two movies aren’t the best for 3D audio it did sound like my surround speakers were active instead of the headphones. Even with all the troubles listed below I gave this headphone system 3 stars because of the awesome “3D sound” produced. THE BAD: If you want to enjoy Atmos/ DTS:X Hooking up the “processing unit” will cost you an HDMI port or two depending on your setup. I could not use the eARC port of the JVC ``processing unit” directly with my eARC port on my Denon X2700H. Nor would it work with the monitor 2 out on the Denon. This was going to be my setup from the beginning in order to enjoy late night movies. So my setup involved hooking up the JVC eARC port to my Sony X900H TV eARC port. My other equipment is hooked up to the Denon AVR and the monitor 2 out goes to the only other HDMI 2.1 port on my TV. This worked for me. However anytime I shut off one of my components the JVC processing unit would shut completely off requiring me to unplug and replug the JVC processing unit for it to have power again. JVC says this is a CEC function. However I turned CEC off on the processing unit, and any other component involved, and the problem continued. I still considered keeping the Jvc xp-ext1 because the sound produced was awesome but I got frustrated on the constant unplugging and replugging of the power. Finally I tried just plugging my Xbox one, Sony UBP-X700 4k Blu Ray Player, and Roku Ultra directly into the JVC processing unit. Only the Roku Ultra worked properly. The Sony UBP-X700 4k Blu Ray Player and Xbox One would freeze up. This made my ultimate decision to return the product because it is not ready for prime time or maybe I got a bad unit. THE UGLY: Most of the functions require a downloaded app in order to use or change on the processing unit. I do not like this idea at all. So many things can go wrong with an app. What if an update to the app made things worse down the line? What if JVC decided not to support the app in a few years? The processing unit is plastic like and flimsy. For $1000 I expected much more. The “setup” involved plugging in a 3.5mm audio cable from the headphones to the processing unit and taking several measurements sort of like Audyssey. However, it is very tedious and constantly has errors during setup. After about 10 attempts I got it to “measure” my ears and ambient sounds. The package does NOT come with an HDMI cable. I have several ultra high speed cables so I was fine. However, for $1000 the package should come with an ultra high speed HDMI cable. Also for $1000 any and all functions and settings should be on the processing unit instead of having to use an app. FUTURE HOPES: I hope Sony comes out with a new version of their MDR-HW700DS that has an eARC port and support for Atmos/DTS:X Or I would even love to see an updated WH-L600 with an eARC port with Atmos/DTS:X support. My final future hope would be for Dolby to add their “Dolby Atmos for Headphones” into all future AVRs and or TV’s. My RIG 800XL’s sound awesome on Xbox one with “Dolby Atmos for Headphones”. Unfortunately my Xbox One is only HD not 4K. Maybe in a few months when Xbox series X is available without paying unscrupulous scalpers I will go that route and pay half the price of these JVC Exofields. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on May 10, 2021 by S. Cargill

  • By Far the Best Home Theater Experience you can have with Headphones
There is definitely a lot of confusion when it comes to how to connect these and what can and cannot be passed through, and understandably so. It can be pretty complicated, especially if you were trying to figure it out on your own when they first came out as there was like 0 information on the web. Essentially, you're not going to be able to passthrough Dolby Vision. But neither does my 2021 LG SN10YG sound bar to my 2021 LG CX OLED... You cant have 4K, HDR, and 60fps at the same time even running 48GB HDMI, well at least with the 2021 Nvidia Shield Pro from my experience. At any rate, there is a workaround for this... I just connect my Nvidia Shield directly to my LG CX HDMI 1 for perfect 4K, YCbCr - 444 - 10-bpc, Dolby Vision or HDR10, 60 to 120fps. For audio i just utilize the eARC channel and run a 48GBps HDMI from the eARC port on my TV to the eARC port on the XP-EXT1 and set the XP-EXT1 to the digital port and point the app to eARC and I have no issues. The XP-EXT1 is superior in every way to the Sony MDR-HW700DS, Sony - WH-L600, SENNHEISER RS 175, and SENNHEISER RS 195... I bought and returned them all... The key to getting the most out of the XP-EXT1 and getting the3 experience JVC is selling is you must use the eARC connection for the DSP to receive all the bandwidth it takes to reproduce Dolby Atmos, you have to have a high speed audio connection via HDMI cable to get the effects of the overhead speakers. Optical or Toslink will not do you any good, as it cannot support multi channel audio... And lastly, take a whole bunch of measurements, run the matching process often. Take different readings too, like make sure its absolutely scilent and make sure the headphones have a perfect seal and that you are standing in the middle of the room. There is a microphone in the speaker cup that takes measurments of your ears using sonar and sends sweep signals. You will find that slight differences in how you are wearing the headphones at the time of measurement effect the sound you are getting. At first the sounds might sound synthetic or weird, take another measurement, and use Theater room 2 if you want that huge bass slam these have to offer. Don't forget to boost the gain and EQ it either. I just wish JVC would put out another FW update already and/or update the app, to add some filters or filter tweaks, something. Give these things a little attention and you will feel like that guy on the web site with his head exploding. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 6, 2021 by Amazon Customer

  • Perfect For Those Who Need It
These headphones seems to get a lot of negative press for not being ready “out of the box”. It will take some time to setup properly, especially using the JVC provided app to register different sound profiles (note: like many have said, you should try at least 5 different pairings / registrations until you like what you hear). But if you want Dolby Atmos capable headphones for whatever reason (i.e. apartment, sound sensitive environments, newborns, etc.), these headphones fit the bill — emphasis on “bill”, because they’re obviously quite pricey. That’s why I’ve rated these 4-stars, purely from a value standpoint. There’s nothing about the build quality or equipment technology that suggests to me $800+ price. I believe JVC prices this high because they’re one of the only manufacturers filling the headphone / Atmos space on the market right now, and you’re paying the premium for that. My suggestion for those of you purely streaming content: just buy an Apple TV 4K + Apple AirPods Pro’s / Max. That combination will run you anywhere from $350-$600 (still a value compared to these) and is fully capable of producing Atmos / spatial audio supported videos on many services (Netflix, Apple TV, HBO Max, Hulu — the list grows). ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 20, 2022 by Steven Green

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