Product test

Hue Play Gradient Lightstrip: The colour explosion in the living room

Michael Restin
12.11.2020
Translation: machine translated

The Philips Hue Play Gradient Lightstrip has been long awaited and is as long as its name. The list of necessary accessories is also long. The Ambilight for retrofitting is only worthwhile if you have a large TV and a large budget.

Fundamentals

My setup on the TV looks roughly as the manufacturer intended. I'm now adding the Gradient Lightstrip. I want to test whether it outperforms the Hue Play Lightbars and how much added value it offers.

Enlightenment

The beauty of Hue is that you can extend your Ambilight to the whole room. To do this, you create an entertainment area in the app and add up to ten coloured lights, which are then controlled together by the Sync Box. While the position of Lightbars and other lights in the room can be defined, the Lightstrip is always located behind the TV. I stick it behind the piano and simply move the TV in front of it - so I have a direct comparison with the effect of the lightbars.

Installation

The Gradient Lightstrip comes neatly rolled up, with five brackets and a power supply unit. If none of the three available lengths fits your TV, you should opt for the smaller size if in doubt and mount the Lightstrip slightly offset inwards. A distance of five to ten centimetres from the edge is recommended. It shines outwards at a 45-degree angle and, with a maximum of 1100 lumens, is bright enough to bathe your wall in rich colours.

There's not much you can do wrong when attaching: The brackets are attached with 3M adhesives, the light tube is clipped on and the power supply unit is plugged in. The installation also holds bombproof on the rough wooden back of my piano and the length of the light strip fits as if it was made for it.

Setting up

Impressions

Depending on whether you select "Floor", "TV height" or "Ceiling", you get a different colour experience. This allows you to configure different entertainment areas that you can switch between. You don't have to worry about this with the Gradient Lightstrip. It only has one job - and it does it very well.

Restrictions

Conclusion

The effect is great cinema. If you're already a Hue user, have a suitably large TV and want to pimp it up with Ambilight, the Gradient Lightstrip is definitely worth considering. Don't forget: The colour magic only works with Bridge, Sync Box and via external video sources, not with the apps on your TV.

The metre-long specialist with its seven light segments wins the direct comparison with the Hue Play Lightbar. It distributes the light on the wall more evenly and strongly. The space on the TV definitely belongs to the Gradient Lightstrip and it fits seamlessly into the Hue world. After the Sync Box came onto the market a year ago, it is only logical that it is now finally available. The fan community has waited long enough for this light strip.

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Simple writer and dad of two who likes to be on the move, wading through everyday family life. Juggling several balls, I'll occasionally drop one. It could be a ball, or a remark. Or both.


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