Fasetto has announced that its Audio Cu system, which connects TVs and other audio devices to speakers and subwoofers using the existing power line wiring in a home, has received Dolby Atmos Product Certification from Dolby Laboratories.
- Home
- Technology
- News
These boxes will send Dolby Atmos through your home’s power lines
Trade speaker cables for your home’s existing electrical wiring with Fasetto’s Dolby Atmos-certified Audio Cu system that sends audio signals through power lines.


Similar to powerline networking solutions that can leverage existing electrical wiring to share internet around a home, Fasetto’s Audio Cu is an alternative to having to snake audio cables through a wall or attempt to camouflage wires connecting speakers to an audio source under rugs and furniture. It’s also an alternative to wireless solutions like Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, which have their own challenges and compromises, including added latency, audio compression, and signal reliability.
For a home theater setup with five speakers and a subwoofer, you’d need seven power outlets and seven Audio Cu devices — one transmitter for your TV (the company says an AV receiver isn’t needed) and one receiver for each speaker. Fasetto says the added latency of the system (signals are specially encoded before being sent through power lines) is less than 20 milliseconds, and it’s not affected by interference.
Any speaker with red and black (positive and negative) terminals is compatible with Audio Cu, and up to 10 channels can be sent through power lines from a single transmitter, accommodating a 7.1.2 Dolby Atmos setup. For larger homes, up to six transmitters in separate setups can be used, but the Audio Cu system maxes out at a total of 32 channels. Setup and configuration, including audio presets, EQ adjustments, and effects for individual speakers, all take place within an iOS and Android mobile app, although a TV or projector remote can be used to simply control volume.
Fasetto, which has created a couple of other multi-device connectivity solutions, hasn’t announced the price of the Audio Cu transmitters and receivers, but it expects the system to be available soon, when pricing will be revealed. Assuming it doesn’t add too much to the cost of a home theater setup, it could be a welcome alternative solution — also assuming you don’t live in a remote cabin lacking electricity.

Trump just found the worst way to regulate AI
- 4 hours ago
Ghana beat Panama 1-0 in World Cup opener after injury-time winner
- 5 hours ago

How to pray when you don’t believe in God
- 13 hours ago

Schlage’s UWB-enabled smart lock launches this month
- 6 hours ago
US and Iran presidents sign ceasefire agreement, but Trump says he could still resume attacks
- 5 hours ago

ADB approves $700m loan for Pakistan's insurance sector
- a minute ago

Why the Supreme Court is fighting over deadly gas and firing squads
- 13 hours ago

Iran war: PM Shehbaz signs Islamabad MoU as mediator
- 5 hours ago

10 things Elon Musk can — but probably won’t — do with $1 trillion
- 13 hours ago

Roborock’s Q10 S5 Plus robovac is over half off, matching its best price to date
- 6 hours ago

PSX gains nearly 900 points amid Iran-US interim peace deal
- 3 hours ago

Amazon’s data centers used 2.5 billion gallons of water last year
- 6 hours ago

:no_upscale():format(webp)/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/25653111/audiocu.gif)











