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IdiotInCharge said:Onkyo one the cheap, Denon on the good, you can spend more on a reciever than you would on a house if you wish. I use a cheepo Kenwood from a HTIB set, and am perfectly satisfied (I feel I got more than what I payed for). Check it for features mostly, and I personally avoid Sony/Pioneer like the plague.
Stereophile said:My personal opinion on quality.
Best: Denon, Marantz, Integra
Good: Yamaha, Sony ES, Onkyo, Pioneer Elite
Not So Good: JVC, Sony, Pioneer, Kenwood
There are smaller less known brands that are supposed to be good. Like Outlaw for example. For sound quality I would generalize and say there are 3 price brackets. Less then 500 bucks, 500-1500, and the 1500+ flagships. Obviously the more you pay the more features you get and quality improves somewhat. I think the multi thousand dollar receivers are a waste. Obsolete as fast as computers and the sound quality is still a far from seperates.
DeepFreeze said:Denon, Marantz, Integra is your best? What about EAD, Krell, Carver/aka Sunfire, Rotel?
I recently (3-4 months) got the Yamaha 1400, baby brother to the 2400. I think, IIRC, the major difference was in the power output, with a couple other minor things thrown in to boot. Since I'm driving my mains with a separate Carver amp, the power rating wasn't a big concern to me. The auto-tune feature made an immediate difference in the sound quality in my particular room (one side of the surround space is an "open" (non-existant) wall, so I was looking for a product that would help me tune the setup better than my ear could. I think it did a pretty good job, though I'm sure a professional installer may have been able to tweak it in further. Anyway, without being able to comment on the Denon, I'll say that I'm very pleased with the Yahama 1400 / 2400 and feel that it's worth looking into for those in the $1000 or less budget range.m1abram said:Well we really need a budget and a goal to give you a good recommendation.
However if your budget is in the $1000 mark for a reciever, I just did some research and auditions for a new reciever that might help.
I personnally looked at the Denon 3805 and the Yamaha 2400, nothing wrong with Onkyo or Pioneer. Just these two models had the feature set I wanted (I/O's, surrounds, etc).
Anyhow, I demoed both Denon and Yamaha. Both sounded very good on their own right, but with a side by side compare I just liked the sound of the Denon better. I actually was rather surprised that I would be able to hear a difference between them, but it was very different. The Denon had IMHO a more natural sound to it, particularly with voices.
leukotriene said:<snip>..... Of course the number of people with dual Xeon boxes on this board already shows this.![]()
Yeah, they don't have much "soul."DruSi3r said:imho yamahas sound over produced and too "digital" for my likes