Home theater receiver replacement for vinyl-friendly household
August 12, 2016 8:14 AM
Yes, this is absolutely rich-American-problems territory, but this crowd seems to Know Things. I've narrowed it down to a couple contenders, but I'd love to hear the wisdom of this particular crowd...
Our home theater receiver -- a Yamaha RX-V863 -- has developed an irritating problem where one of its HDMI inputs is refusing to carry or decode surround tracks. The broken one can carry stereo fine, but anything more complex than that is lost.
We've had the thing for a while (2008?), and it looks like the market has advanced enough that we could buy a better device for way less than I paid for this one (which was about $1K), so I'm okay going that route ESPECIALLY in light of the better features now available, including and especially being able to control it from an app on our phones.
But, obviously, there's a complication.
I've been pretty pleased with the recs on offer from The Wirecutter, and their current rec is the Denon AVR-S710W; it's a steal vs. our old one at $379, but is only an 80W per channel device vs. the 105W Yamaha. We have a big room and power-hungry main speakers, so my inclination is to step up to the next model, the AVR-S910W. And I was about to just buy it when I ran into a problem:
Nothing below the $1,300 level in the Denon line comes with a phono input, which is an issue because we enjoy vinyl and have a nice turntable that requires a phono stage.
Onkyo and Yamaha both have models in my price range that support phono natively, but the wrinkle here is that the Denon models suggested by the Wirecutter are now available on end-of-model-year closeout. I could get the fancier one for less than $400, and then pick up (e.g.) a phono preamp from Crutchfield for about $100, and still spend less than for a new model Yamaha.
Is that a crazy idea? I've been happy with Wirecutter recs in the past, and I could easily believe that a $99 dedicated phono stage might outperform anything included by default, but that's really a guess. Balancing "good buy + fiddlier setup" vs. "all in one solution" has me a bit flummoxed, as does my total ignorance of relative quality for these three brands. (I'm also totally open to some other maker, but these three are ones easiest to get.)
Thanks.
Our home theater receiver -- a Yamaha RX-V863 -- has developed an irritating problem where one of its HDMI inputs is refusing to carry or decode surround tracks. The broken one can carry stereo fine, but anything more complex than that is lost.
We've had the thing for a while (2008?), and it looks like the market has advanced enough that we could buy a better device for way less than I paid for this one (which was about $1K), so I'm okay going that route ESPECIALLY in light of the better features now available, including and especially being able to control it from an app on our phones.
But, obviously, there's a complication.
I've been pretty pleased with the recs on offer from The Wirecutter, and their current rec is the Denon AVR-S710W; it's a steal vs. our old one at $379, but is only an 80W per channel device vs. the 105W Yamaha. We have a big room and power-hungry main speakers, so my inclination is to step up to the next model, the AVR-S910W. And I was about to just buy it when I ran into a problem:
Nothing below the $1,300 level in the Denon line comes with a phono input, which is an issue because we enjoy vinyl and have a nice turntable that requires a phono stage.
Onkyo and Yamaha both have models in my price range that support phono natively, but the wrinkle here is that the Denon models suggested by the Wirecutter are now available on end-of-model-year closeout. I could get the fancier one for less than $400, and then pick up (e.g.) a phono preamp from Crutchfield for about $100, and still spend less than for a new model Yamaha.
Is that a crazy idea? I've been happy with Wirecutter recs in the past, and I could easily believe that a $99 dedicated phono stage might outperform anything included by default, but that's really a guess. Balancing "good buy + fiddlier setup" vs. "all in one solution" has me a bit flummoxed, as does my total ignorance of relative quality for these three brands. (I'm also totally open to some other maker, but these three are ones easiest to get.)
Thanks.
Also, and I'm not an engineer, but how much power you'll actually get out of your speakers depends ultimately on how your input and output impedances match, not on the watt rating. And truly, if you want to preserve fidelity, as opposed to maximize power, you want to an impedance mismatch to drop most of your voltage at the end.
posted by Lutoslawski at 8:31 AM on August 12, 2016
posted by Lutoslawski at 8:31 AM on August 12, 2016
There's no reason not to use an external phono stage. Go for it.
I'll also second that 80wpc is likely fine. No harm in going to a bigger amp though if it isn't stretching your budget. I'm using 220wpc amps in my living room just because I can and had them handy.
posted by switchbladenaif at 8:49 AM on August 12, 2016
I'll also second that 80wpc is likely fine. No harm in going to a bigger amp though if it isn't stretching your budget. I'm using 220wpc amps in my living room just because I can and had them handy.
posted by switchbladenaif at 8:49 AM on August 12, 2016
Not to threadsit, but: I get that watts is an imperfect metric. Given the size and height of the room (lofty-style townhouse), the relative inefficiency of the mains (Vandersteens), and the performance of the Yamaha so far, it seems to me that taking a step back in power wouldn't make us happy -- if for "big explodey movies" if nothing else.
posted by uberchet at 8:51 AM on August 12, 2016
posted by uberchet at 8:51 AM on August 12, 2016
The extent to which power ratings are inaccurate to the point of fabricated when compared to reality is much, much greater than the difference between 80w and 105w, you would never tell the difference. Don't make that one of your factors.
(I'll put my 50w NAD up against the 105w Yamaha and bet everything in my wallet on which has more oomph)
posted by Cosine at 9:06 AM on August 12, 2016
(I'll put my 50w NAD up against the 105w Yamaha and bet everything in my wallet on which has more oomph)
posted by Cosine at 9:06 AM on August 12, 2016
Nthing the advice to get a separate phono preamp. The Schiit Mani, the U-Turn Pluto, and the Pro-Ject and Music Hall lines are all good options and good price/value propositions.
posted by box at 8:34 AM on August 13, 2016
posted by box at 8:34 AM on August 13, 2016
Thanks all for confirming my direction, both here and in MeMail. I placed an order for the discounted Denon and a Pro-Ject phono stage; I should be hooking them up tomorrow!
posted by uberchet at 6:53 PM on August 14, 2016
posted by uberchet at 6:53 PM on August 14, 2016
This thread is closed to new comments.
As far as the watts - 80W per channel seems like plenty to me unless you want to rattle your neighbors windows or have a really huge room, or are splitting that wattage amongst a whole bunch of speakers.
posted by Lutoslawski at 8:28 AM on August 12, 2016