Overview
Two speakers, one app, and almost an entire hi-fi system fits on a shelf. PSB takes the formula introduced by the Alpha iQ in 2022 a step further: a pair of active speakers that do without the slightest cable between them, handle streaming, television, and vinyl, and deliver true left-right stereo. The iQ2 version adds the wireless link between the two cabinets and seven finishes.
Stereo without a cable between the speakers
That is the difference that justifies the model’s name. On the iQ2, the left speaker and the right speaker communicate via a low-latency radio link. No wire connects one to the other; only mains power reaches each cabinet. You place the two speakers wherever they fit best, on a shelf, a console, or a desk, without worrying about the length of an interconnect cable.
Each cabinet has its own amplification and its own converter, which gives two truly separate channels rather than widened mono. Voices remain centered, instruments are placed in space, and the soundstage extends beyond the physical width of the speakers. All connections are located on the main speaker, configurable as left or right during setup; the second receives only power and a reset button.
More watts for a compact format
The iQ2s take the acoustic foundation of the Alpha iQ but change the engine. The new Texas Instruments Class-D amplification platform delivers 270 W in total, compared with 180 W for the Alpha iQ. The detail matters: each woofer gets a dedicated 90 W, and each tweeter its own 45 W block. One amplifier per driver, after the crossover, therefore, which is the logic of a truly active speaker.
On the driver side, the 19 mm aluminum dome tweeter combines a neodymium magnet and ferrofluid cooling, while the 100 mm polypropylene woofer is built on a steel chassis with a rubber surround. The crossover is handled by an active digital crossover (DSP), and the bass-reflex loading relies on a tuned port extended by DSP processing. True to the Alpha lineage, PSB places the tweeter below the woofer: the balance between the two drivers remains coherent whether you are sitting or standing.
The response covers 64 Hz to 20 kHz at plus or minus 3 dB, with measured extension down to 35 Hz at the -10 dB threshold. A 100 mm woofer in a 24 cm high cabinet will not go as low as a floorstanding speaker; that is the price of the compact format. PSB embraces this and provides a dedicated subwoofer output, with high-pass and low-pass filters managed by the DSP, for anyone who wants more low-end weight or to fill a larger room.
TV, turntable, and other sources
The iQ2 is not limited to streaming. The rear panel of the main speaker includes an HDMI eARC port for TV sound, an optical input, a USB-C port for a digital source (computer, smartphone), and a USB-A port for reading a storage drive. For vinyl, the phono input includes a moving magnet (MM) preamp, bypassable from the BluOS app when the source already outputs line level, such as a CD player or a turntable with a built-in preamp. Network connection is via Ethernet or Wi-Fi depending on your setup.
HDMI eARC deserves a mention for anyone considering these speakers as a replacement for a soundbar: the low-latency link between the two cabinets avoids the delay between picture and sound, a classic weak point of wireless pairs connected to a TV.
BluOS at the heart of listening
The system runs on BluOS, Lenbrook’s platform also found in Bluesound and NAD products. In practical terms, you get access to more than twenty streaming services, in lossless and high-resolution quality, from a single app available on Android, iOS, macOS, and Windows. The internal converter handles files up to 24-bit and 192 kHz. AirPlay 2, Spotify Connect, and Tidal Connect are all present, and Bluetooth supports the aptX Adaptive codec for direct streaming from a phone.
Multiroom lets you stream to 63 other BluOS devices spread throughout the house. On top of the main speaker, touch controls provide access to volume, playback, and two presets (a station, a playlist, or a service at your fingertips). Voice control works via Alexa, Google Assistant, and Siri (through AirPlay 2), and smart home integration covers Control4, Crestron, ELAN, RTI, and URC, with infrared code learning for universal remotes.
Seven finishes and a compact cabinet
The cabinet combines MDF, a front baffle in MDF over aluminum, and a rear baffle in aluminum, a combination designed for rigidity without making the whole thing heavier. Fabric grilles are included. PSB applies an anti-fingerprint treatment to the finishes, a detail that is appreciated day to day on a speaker placed within hand height.
The iQ2 comes in seven finishes: black, white, ember red, boreal green, granite gray, sandstone beige, plus a walnut veneer accented with copper highlights. The dimensions remain compact, 145 x 246 x 192 mm per speaker, for 7.36 kg per pair. Enough to find a place in a small or medium-sized room, on a low cabinet as well as on a bookshelf.
Documentation
Technical specifications
Frequency response
- On-axis response at 0° (± 3 dB): 64 Hz to 20 kHz
- Low-frequency cutoff (-10 dB): 35 Hz
Amplification
- Power per speaker
- Tweeter: 45 W
- Woofer: 90 W
- Total system power: 270 W (dual power supply)
- Amplification platform: Class-D (TI-based)
Acoustic design
- Tweeter: 19 mm aluminum dome, ferrofluid, neodymium magnet
- Woofer: 100 mm polypropylene cone, rubber surround, steel chassis
- Crossover: active DSP crossover
- Enclosure type: bass-reflex (tuned port, DSP extension)
Connectivity
- Analog: MM phono
- Digital: HDMI eARC, optical, USB-C (playback), USB-A (storage)
- Network: Ethernet, Wi-Fi, BluOS
- Wireless: Bluetooth aptX Adaptive
- Output: subwoofer (DSP low-pass and high-pass filters)
Streaming and features
- Platform: BluOS multiroom, more than 20 services (lossless and high resolution)
- Converter: high-resolution DAC up to 24-bit / 192 kHz
- Compatibility: AirPlay 2, Spotify Connect, Tidal Connect
- Multiroom: streaming to 63 additional BluOS devices
- Phono preamp: built-in MM, bypassable for line-level sources
- Home automation: Control4, Crestron, ELAN, RTI, URC, IR learning
- Voice control: Alexa, Google Assistant, Siri (via AirPlay 2)
- Link between speakers: low-latency wireless stereo
Construction
- Cabinet: MDF
- Front baffle: MDF on aluminum
- Rear baffle: aluminum
- Grilles: fabric, included
Available finishes
- Black, white, ember red, boreal green, granite gray, sandstone beige, walnut veneer
Dimensions and weight
- Net dimensions (W x H x D): 145 x 246 x 192 mm
- Packaging dimensions: 268 x 402 x 385 mm
- Net weight: 7.36 kg per pair
- Gross weight: 8.27 kg per pair
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the real difference between the iQ2 and the iQ1?
Three differences. The iQ1 connects its two speakers with a supplied cable, while the iQ2 does so wirelessly. The iQ1 shares a 45 W two-channel amplifier for the tweeters, while the iQ2 dedicates an independent 45 W block to each tweeter. Finally, the iQ1 is limited to black and white, while the iQ2 offers seven finishes, including walnut veneer.
Can a subwoofer be added?
Yes. A subwoofer output is provided, with high-pass and low-pass filters controlled by the DSP. This option makes sense to gain deeper bass or to fill a larger room than the original format is intended for.
Which Bluetooth codec is supported?
Bluetooth supports aptX Adaptive, which adjusts the bitrate according to the connection quality. For serious listening, the network (Wi-Fi or Ethernet) via BluOS remains preferable, with Bluetooth used mainly for occasional sources.
Which home automation ecosystems can the iQ2 be integrated into?
Via BluOS, the iQ2 connects to Control4, Crestron, ELAN, RTI and URC, with the added ability to learn infrared commands to control the system from a universal remote.
- Eco-contribution included in the sale price.





























