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jarcher, my initial thoughts were to use the CD player for direct audio (with the Yamaha amp) without using the AVR. Your post has got me thinking...hmm....if I did what you recommend would not the processing in the Onkyo colour the sound? If the Onkyo NR1010 is equal to the Yamaha S2000 as an audio device then it would mose sense to sell the Yamaha S2000 and replace it with a power amp. What do you think?I was under the impression that for 2 channel audio a good integrated like the S2000 would outperform any AVR costing twice as much including those like the Arcam AVR 400 leave alone lesser ones like the Yamaha Aventage A2020 or Onkyo NR1010. Granted the 1010 might have a great DAC. What about the rest of the processing in it?
Never heard it. Marantz isn't even showing that model on their US site. I'm sure it's pretty good. Marantz has a much deserved stellar reputation for digital playback.
Used Apollo's in the US go for $500 or so, but the new R's go for $850 demo or $1100 new. To more specifically answer your question : I suspect the Onkyo 7030 would be a better cd transport than the Panasonic BDT220, if nothing else because of it's robustness + the power supply side. But again - do you want to put even that $200+ into a cd player when it could go towards the home theater / music server......To make things less confusing : I'd either use an existing cd / dvd player as a temporary transport feed to the receiver - and if you don't have that, then maybe the Panasonic BDT220 because it's a good Blu Ray player. Save your money & focus more on putting together your home theater / music server and a high quality DAC if you want to surpass the Onkyo receiver. If the server you buy or make doesn't have an internal cd / dvd / blu ray transport, you could always hook one up via USB. Somehow you're gonna want to rip your music collection to it anyway...and at that point, I suspect you may never want to mess with the physical cd's again.
Your cheap or mine? As mentioned above, I look at an Oppo 93 (if still available).Plus as mentioned above, you'd have all the formats covered. Later on with more space you could move it into a HT system.
Thank you all for your response. Audiocircle's forums do not yet have a multi-quote feature or I'd have addressed all those who responded together.Based on the response I figured you need some more information.1. I live in India and would like to buy something local (exposure, NAD, simaudio, Arcam etc are all available locally and the Oppo 103 is available in the grey market). I don't have the time or inclination to do the importing myself. Besides there would be no support. With speakers it is easy as there are few parts but with electronics you need support.2. That said many if not most brands are available here however since volumes are thin and availability sketchy prices are all list+dealer margins. Discounts are very, very rare. The Rotel for example sels for over $1700 and the TEAC is just not available.3. I do intend to add a hard disk based media player from Asus and/or Western digital. Most of my CDs have already been ripped to WavPack or/and FLAC (about 1TB of music) but I also like the whole process of spinning a disk (if I had room I'd have retained and even added to my LP collection but living in a small Mumbai apartment does not give me that option).4. The Marantz 8004 is also not available although the 6004 and KI pearl are. The former sells for about $500 and the later for about $1500.5. In my limited experience I have found wireless via bluetooth or wifi does not have the fidelity of a wired connection. So while AirPlay is convienient it would not be my primary listening.6. On an unrelated note the Yamaha amplifier will be used by an Onkyo NR1010 AVR as a power amp. This is because the same system is being used for 2 channel and 7.1 and the front speaker (subwoofer less RC4) will do double duty. So in 7.1 the Onkyo will feed information from the set-top box and DVD player and other video devices to the power amp section of the Yamaha (which in turn is connected to the front speakers). In 2 channel mode the Onkyo and other video related devices are not in the picture. It will be a simple sginal path from CD player to Amplifier to SpeakersI understand that having a digital coax and USB inputs would be a bonus. Neither the Arcam 17 or Simaudio Moon 230 have this. From my original list the NAD has an optical input (is TOSlink still a poor option??) and I don't know about the advance Acoustics. I believe the Oppo 105 is not shipping yet. The 103 has only just become available (in the grey market it sells for about $750). The Oppo 95 was available at about $1500 and I assume the 105 would retail for close to $2000 here when it starts shipping.So far the Rotel 1072 and Marantz 8004 have become valid options if indeed I can find them for $1200 pr so. Either that or bite the bullet and get the Exposure 2010S2 for $1700 or NAD 565 bee for about $900. Any other options? Is the Exposure so much better than the NAD? Does it make sense to sacrifice USB or coax inputs and get the Arcam 17 or Simaudio moon 230D instead?
The more I look at that Panasonic 220, the more impressed I am. It'll serve as a transport for your CDs, it will play your blu rays, AND it can work as a media streamer (via network or USB) AND smartphone remote control, for $200? Between that and your onkyo receiver, you really don't even need a media server pc - just an external USB hard drive. I would seriously use this with your onkyo receiver, and if you want better sound from there, invest in a +USD$700 standalone DAC to connect via digital out from the onkyo receiver. Seriously - investing up to USD$1k in a standalone cd player (or even USD$1K blu ray player) when you have the above option is a total waste of money. Use the money you save for the DAC, speakers, whatever.
I keep thinking, particularly as you already have most your cds ripped, that you'll very soon go to the convenience of PC based audio, so spending a lot of money on a cd transport doesn't make much sense. But from your posts, I'm seeing that I'm wrong & that you really want to spin those little shiny suckers as best as possible.As for importing - having lived abroad the better part of my life I can sympathize w/ the hassles. As it seems that India has a 35K rps / USD$650 duty free allowance, I'd just get some kind friend / family member / etc whose coming from abroad to bring it with them. Don't think India customs could imagine it actually costs $1,000 (55K rps)! No duty / no hassles.
Yes - I would say the Oppo 95 is better than NAD, Marantz, Exposure, Arcam The Oppo 103 is not an "audiophile" player....but so is a Panasonic 220 for less than $200. I'd get your wife a 220, let her Arcam do the audio.... Hook up a portable hard drive w/ her favorite music to it's USB port - there's even a free smartphone remote app so she can put away the ugly remote (the ladies hate the remote controls).If you get an Oppo 95, I would hook up the stereo audio out to the Yamaha, and HDMI to Onkyo. If the Onkyo had multi channel analog input, I'd say do that. I don't see much reason to wait for the Oppo 105 unless you really thing you're going to need it's additional input / outputs. And I wouldn't be shy about imposing on a friend / relative.