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Logitech X-240 Specifications and Reviews: 25W RMS 2.1 Speaker System

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Logitech X-240 speakers specifications and reviews

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Direct answer to the question

The Logitech X-240 is a discontinued budget 2.1 multimedia speaker system from around 2007, designed for PC/Mac desktop use and portable music players. Its most distinctive feature is the wired control pod with an integrated stow-away cradle for iPod/Zune/MP3 players, PDAs, and phones.

The correct commonly published specification is 25 W RMS total, not 16 W: 15 W RMS subwoofer + 5 W RMS per satellite. Reviews generally describe it as good value for casual desktop listening, with surprisingly strong bass for the size, but limited fidelity, somewhat muddy midrange, and bass that is punchy rather than precise. (newegg.ca)


Logitech X-240 key specifications

Parameter Specification
Speaker type 2.1 powered multimedia speaker system
Channels 2 satellites + 1 subwoofer
Total RMS power 25 W RMS
Satellite power 5 W RMS each
Subwoofer power 15 W RMS
Frequency response 40 Hz – 20 kHz
Signal-to-noise ratio >96 dB
Satellite drivers 2 in high-excursion drivers
Subwoofer driver 4 in ported/down-firing woofer
Inputs 3.5 mm stereo PC input + additional 3.5 mm input on control pod
Output 3.5 mm headphone jack
Controls Power, volume, subwoofer/bass adjustment depending on version/placement
Special feature Integrated stow-away cradle for portable music players
Satellite dimensions About 6.9 × 2.6 × 3.8 in / 175 × 66 × 97 mm
Subwoofer dimensions About 8.7 × 5.9 × 8.7 in / 220 × 150 × 220 mm
Warranty when sold Typically 2 years, according to retail listings
Current status Discontinued; Logitech support lists no downloads, documents, FAQs, or spare parts

Specifications from Newegg list the X-240 as a 25 W RMS 2.1 system, with 5 W satellites, 15 W subwoofer, 2 in satellite drivers, 4 in ported subwoofer driver, 40 Hz–20 kHz frequency response, and >96 dB SNR. (newegg.ca) Logitech’s current support page still identifies the X-240 model family but indicates there are no downloads, documents, FAQs, or spare parts available for it. (support.logi.com)


Detailed problem analysis

1. System architecture

The Logitech X-240 is a classic low-cost active 2.1 PC speaker system:

  • The subwoofer enclosure contains the amplifier electronics.
  • The two satellite speakers reproduce most of the midrange and treble.
  • The subwoofer handles low-frequency content and adds perceived weight to music, games, and video.
  • The control pod provides desktop-accessible volume control, power control, headphone output, and the portable-player cradle.

From an engineering standpoint, this is a cost-optimized design. The satellites use small full-range drivers instead of separate woofers and tweeters, so there is no proper two-way crossover in the satellites. That reduces cost and size but limits high-frequency detail, dispersion, and midrange cleanliness.

2. Power rating and the 16 W vs 25 W confusion

Some secondary descriptions of older Logitech speaker systems confuse the X-240 with other X-series models. For the X-240, the best-supported figure is:

\[ P\text{total} = 15\,W\text{sub} + 2 \times 5\,W\text{satellite} = 25\,W\text{RMS} \]

Both retail specifications and historical reviews support the 25 W RMS figure. Techgage also lists the system as 25 W RMS at 1% THD, with 15 W RMS subwoofer power and 5 W RMS satellite power. (techgage.com)

Note that Newegg’s detailed table quotes satellite and subwoofer power at 10% THD, while Techgage quotes 1% THD. This is a reminder that low-cost PC speaker power ratings can vary depending on the distortion threshold and measurement method. In practice, the system is suitable for near-field desktop listening, not room-filling hi-fi playback.

3. Subwoofer performance

The X-240 uses a 4 in ported/down-firing subwoofer. This is small for true deep-bass reproduction, but the ported enclosure and electronic bass processing help increase perceived bass output. Newegg describes the system as using real-time bass equalization with a down-firing subwoofer. (newegg.ca)

Techgage’s listening and sine-wave testing found useful output down to roughly 45 Hz, but strongest clean output was in the 60–100 Hz region. That is typical for compact budget 2.1 systems: the bass sounds present and punchy, but it is not truly deep, linear, or highly controlled. (techgage.com)

Practical implication:

  • Good for: games, casual music, YouTube, desktop movies.
  • Less good for: accurate bass instruments, studio monitoring, orchestral music, electronic music requiring clean sub-50 Hz output.

4. Satellite speaker performance

The satellites use 2 in high-excursion full-range drivers. This saves space and cost, but it imposes predictable limitations:

  • Limited cone area means limited low-mid output.
  • No dedicated tweeter means treble extension and detail are constrained.
  • Small plastic enclosures can add cabinet coloration.
  • High crossover to the subwoofer can make the subwoofer more localizable.

Techgage criticized the satellites for a resonant, somewhat “cupped” midrange character caused by lightweight plastic enclosures, while also noting that stereo imaging was acceptable for the price. (techgage.com)


Review summary

Positive points

Reviewers and users generally liked the X-240 for:

  • Low price / good value
  • Compact desktop footprint
  • Better sound than typical bundled PC speakers
  • Useful control pod
  • Headphone jack
  • Integrated cradle for portable music players
  • Reasonable loudness for a bedroom, dorm room, or office
  • Punchy bass for a very small subwoofer

Wired described the X-240 as a bargain 2.1 system with a subwoofer, two satellites, and a wired remote/cradle, suitable for desktop listening at about the $50 class. (wired.com) Techgage concluded that while the system was not a serious hi-fi product, it represented its price category well and gave it a score of 7/10. (techgage.com)

Negative points

Common criticisms include:

  • Bass is not very clean or precise
  • Midrange can become muddy on dense rock or complex music
  • Treble can sound thin or tinny
  • Build quality feels inexpensive
  • Satellite enclosures are lightweight
  • Cable management can be messy
  • Subwoofer placement is limited by short/fixed cables
  • Not suitable for critical listening

Wired found that rock music could become congested in the midrange, treble could sound tinny, and bass could thump without much precision, although vocals and acoustic material were more pleasing. (wired.com) Techgage similarly judged the system decent for the price but not detailed, with limited bass output and cheap-feeling construction. (techgage.com)


Current information and trends

The X-240 is now an old discontinued product. Logitech’s current support page lists the X-240 model numbers S-0285A, S-0285B, S-0285D, and S-0285E, but no active downloads, documents, FAQs, videos, or spare parts. (support.logi.com)

In current desktop-audio terms, the X-240 is best viewed as a legacy budget speaker system. Modern equivalents may offer:

  • Bluetooth or USB-C connectivity
  • Better Class-D amplifier efficiency
  • Cleaner DSP-based bass management
  • Better protection circuitry
  • More refined satellite drivers
  • More compact power supplies

However, many newer budget 2.1 systems still follow the same basic compromise: small satellites plus an exaggerated mid-bass subwoofer. If sound accuracy is the priority, a good powered 2.0 monitor pair often outperforms a cheap 2.1 system.


Practical guidelines

If you are buying a used Logitech X-240 today, check the following:

  1. Power-on behavior

    • No hum, buzz, or intermittent power.
    • Power LED should remain stable.
  2. Volume control

    • Rotate or slide the volume control slowly.
    • Listen for scratching, crackling, or channel dropout.
    • Noisy controls usually indicate oxidized potentiometer contacts.
  3. Subwoofer

    • Test with bass-heavy material at moderate volume.
    • Avoid units with rattling, scraping, or strong 50/60 Hz hum.
  4. Satellites

    • Confirm both channels work equally.
    • Listen for distorted cones or loose grilles.
  5. Cables

    • Because many cables are fixed or semi-fixed, check for strain damage near the control pod, subwoofer, and satellite entries.
  6. Cradle/pod

    • If you want the original portable-player functionality, verify that the cradle mechanism and auxiliary cable are intact.

For most users, it is worth buying only if inexpensive and fully functional. If the price approaches that of a modern powered speaker set, a newer product is usually the better choice.


Brief summary

The Logitech X-240 is a discontinued 25 W RMS 2.1 PC speaker system with a 15 W subwoofer, two 5 W satellites, 40 Hz–20 kHz rated response, >96 dB SNR, and a distinctive wired control pod with portable-player cradle. It was well regarded as a budget desktop upgrade, especially over built-in or bundled PC speakers. Its weaknesses are typical of small low-cost 2.1 systems: boomy but limited bass, average satellite clarity, modest build quality, and no true hi-fi accuracy.

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