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I want the receiver for all the bells and whistles including the video switching, and the amp to give it just a little bit more umph.
Now the search is on to find a receiver, it never ends!!!!
Wayne,I have a blu ray player that I intended using. Really I will be using the system for music mostly but will want some home theater capabilities to it. I like the idea of separates but there are so many companies out there that it gets confusing.-Keith
Quote from: huey driver on 25 Sep 2008, 11:48 amNow the search is on to find a receiver, it never ends!!!!Arcam, Marantz, Onkyo, Denon and Pioneer are the best IMO. If you can afford the Arcam, go with it. It's the best sounding receiver you can get IMO. Otherwise the others are great too.
OK, heres what Im thinking and please let me know if you think this will be a bad deal. Im looking at the onkyo PR-SC885P pre/amp which seems to have all the bonuses of the new HT systems but without an build in amplifier. I'm going to pari this with either a 5 channel emotiva or a 2 & 3 channel emotiva. What do you all think? Any comments?
Im so confused!!!! Will I notice an appreciable difference by getting separates? I don't mind spending the money if there will be a noticeable difference but Im so new at this that its kind of overwhelming.
There doesn't seem to be a lot of talk about HK products (other than speakers). I know from my professional work that they're one of the few companies that rate power on HT equipment with all channels operating. I"m not claiming that's the best way to rate HT amps, but it does produce very conservative numbers that can't be compared directly with most other specs. So I hope people aren't being turned off to HK because they don't think they have enough power. I suspect the opposite is the case.
Quote from: huey driver on 24 Sep 2008, 01:03 amIm so confused!!!! Will I notice an appreciable difference by getting separates? I don't mind spending the money if there will be a noticeable difference but Im so new at this that its kind of overwhelming. I think the benefit of using seperates is you can keep the amp until it dies and update the pre-pro as technology changes. Amp technology has changed so little in the last ten years, maybe even longer than that.... You could even buy a cheaper receiver now that has most of the bells and whistles and add outboard amps later down the road and use the receiver as the pre-pro. If you have space constraints maybe just a receiver would be best, also if you have a wife or girlfriend a receiveer again might be the better option or in some cases not...