AV Receiver = good stereo? Advice please

AV Receiver = good stereo? Advice please

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LongLiveTazio

Original Poster:

2,714 posts

203 months

Wednesday 24th February 2010
quotequote all
I have a 1080p Panasonic plasma that I originally bought just for movies: I have an HD DVD player and a Blu-ray player. However, I recently moved in with the missus and we now have Sky HD and we also want to buy a decent hifi. Obviously it makes sense to listen to my movies' soundtrack in better clarity now I have more space/better soundproofing than my last house. The benefits of having three devices into one box also is not lost on me.

Thing is, we both like good hifi and neither of us want 5.1. We probably have around £800 to spend in total. I know that historically AV receivers weren't great at stereo. Had a look around and for £400 you can buy a Denon 1910, which seems rather good as a receiver. It also seems to do volume correction which is a nice feature and I would really like. I had a demo in Richer Sounds with some Mordaunt Short Mezzo 2s and listened to it vs a Cambridge Audio 650v stereo amp and the difference wasn't as huge as I thought it may be with my iPod going through it. However, elsewhere I was recommended that the 2310 (£620ish) is vastly superior.

Are there any alternatives?

I'm not allergic to second hand kit either. Some people have grumbled about cheaper build quality, I don't know if this is true. Would I be better off getting an older second hand Yamaha that was originally 1k+? I only need 3 HDMI in, my BR player does upscaling more than well (so I don't really need that feature on the receiver), although I would like a decent compliment of Dolby compliance etc.

In terms of speakers I want to go and listen to some Focal 705s because our listening space will be 3x4m and they seem built for smaller rooms (but with no loss of clarity). I also trust Focal.

Any help greatly appreciated. Obviously I want to trust my ears for everything but it's a minefield getting things to work together!

dalos260

199 posts

187 months

Wednesday 24th February 2010
quotequote all
You don't want 5.1?
You prefer stereo?
You don't need upscaling?

So tell us again, why do you want a receiver?

dalos260

199 posts

187 months

Wednesday 24th February 2010
quotequote all
To add, my advice would be to get yourself a decent stereo amp and a dac. Connect the HDMI cables direct to the TV, and connect the digital cables the the dac and then analogue to the amp.

All in my humble opinion of course. wink

LongLiveTazio

Original Poster:

2,714 posts

203 months

Wednesday 24th February 2010
quotequote all
I was just under the impression that connecting my BR, HD DVD *and* Sky HD to a stereo amp would be a nightmare. Or so I was led to believe - possibly incorrectly. Can you explain in even more layman's terms how I would do this and what kit I would need. I take it the DAC would decode Dolby etc. and make it all lovely for the stereo amp to transmit to the speakers?

Obviously I'd rather have just a stereo amp if I could get away with it, £500 buys you a lot of performance... (second hand Cyrus 6 series?)

Plotloss

67,280 posts

276 months

Wednesday 24th February 2010
quotequote all
All your sources have Stereo RCA outputs (in all probability).

You'll only be able to amplify two channels so why feed it anything more?

Using an offboard DAC will harmonise the sound across the sources to an extent but there is a connection option straight off the bat.

dalos260

199 posts

187 months

Wednesday 24th February 2010
quotequote all
If your really not bothered about surround sound then the only thing that the an HDMI receiver will give you over a stereo amp is picture switching (one HDMI cable to the TV and the audio and picture channel is selected on the receiver). With a stereo amp you would select the input on the TV and then select the audio input on the amp separately.

If you are ok with doing that, then I really do think a stereo amp will give you greater listening pleasure.

All digital sources have 'Digital to Analogue Converters' for outputting to the stereo out (which a stereo amp would need), but they are usually quite poor in the likes of DVD/Bluray players and Sky boxes etc. If you connect these units from their digital outputs to an external DAC, the sound going to your stereo amp is improved a hell of a lot.

The Cambridge Audio Dacmagic gets a lot of very good reviews, but I believe it only has two inputs. I guess your HD player won't get a lot of use so you could maybe connect that direct to the amp.

HTH




OldSkoolRS

6,832 posts

185 months

Wednesday 24th February 2010
quotequote all
If you aren't averse to buying used, you could look for an Arcam AVR280 or AVR350 which gives all the digital connections (bar HDMI, but it will switch two HDMI inputs if that helps) that you might want, plus it has a good reputation for stereo performance. You might also be able to use the spare channels to biamp your left and right speakers (need to check that though).

However, I agree with the posts above that if you don't want 5.1, you may as well use a separate stereo amp instead as £400 will buy you a much better amp for music than an AV reciever would provide. Just to stay on the Arcam tack, you might find a used A22 or A32 around your budget. This page shows the list of discontinued Arcam products incase it's of interest:

http://www.arcam.co.uk/advice-and-support/disconti...

parapaul

2,828 posts

204 months

Thursday 25th February 2010
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Plotloss said:
All your sources have Stereo RCA outputs (in all probability).

You'll only be able to amplify two channels so why feed it anything more?

Using an offboard DAC will harmonise the sound across the sources to an extent but there is a connection option straight off the bat.
Finally, a guru who agrees with my POV biggrin

Either RCA from each device to the amp, or simply RCA from the TV's stereo outputs to the amp. Works very well in my limited experience - my FIL has his TV connected to his (albeit fairly high end) stereo setup and the soundstage is easily better than any 5.1 I've heard yet.

LongLiveTazio

Original Poster:

2,714 posts

203 months

Thursday 25th February 2010
quotequote all
Excellent, that's what I wanted to hear. I take it there is no difference whether I do it from the TV or from the device itself? Would the TV process it and make it worse or?... I mean I know I won't be able to get HD audio but I don't think that matters?

I think buying a DAC may be a really good idea as most of my music is on my iPod, so I imagine it'll clean up some of the poorer stuff. The Cambridge Audio one is £230ish, any more I should look at? Do any of them decode DD, DTS, etc.?

koenig999

1,667 posts

238 months

Thursday 25th February 2010
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The Cambridge Dac is good for connecting to a computer with USB, but not an Ipod, that doesn't have a conventional digital output.

It sounds good for the money, difficult to beat BUT, it only has 2 inputs and a USB, no remote control, so isn't going to be a major solution for you.

I would have thought a good conventional line level integrated amp would work, from Arcam. Mission, Cambridge or the like.

Koenig

dalos260

199 posts

187 months

Thursday 25th February 2010
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LongLiveTazio said:
Excellent, that's what I wanted to hear. I take it there is no difference whether I do it from the TV or from the device itself? Would the TV process it and make it worse or?... I mean I know I won't be able to get HD audio but I don't think that matters?
I'd connect direct from the devices; it will sound better and you'd be able to listen to music while the TV is off. Also, sometimes the TV will slow the sound down a bit and you may find slight lip syncing problems if connected through it first.

LongLiveTazio said:
I think buying a DAC may be a really good idea as most of my music is on my iPod, so I imagine it'll clean up some of the poorer stuff. The Cambridge Audio one is £230ish, any more I should look at? Do any of them decode DD, DTS, etc.?
iPods are a PITA to get the best out of. I don't know the dock market very well, but there is an Onkyo NDS1 dock that takes the sound digitally and passes it through to it's digital output which you can then send to a DAC. It's about £130 though so it all adds up.

Is your computer anywhere near to where your system will be?

LongLiveTazio

Original Poster:

2,714 posts

203 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Near-ish, I'm typing to you from a laptop.

If I were to buy a 'conventional line level integrated amp' I take it I'd just connect via normal stereo cables?

dalos260

199 posts

187 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
LongLiveTazio said:
Near-ish, I'm typing to you from a laptop.

If I were to buy a 'conventional line level integrated amp' I take it I'd just connect via normal stereo cables?
Yes, you could do that; if you get the Cambridge DAC, you could connect your laptop to it via a USB cable (digitally) and enjoy you iTunes music that way rather than from your iPod.

cool

LongLiveTazio

Original Poster:

2,714 posts

203 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
Seems sensible. What about the BR player/Sky HD though?

(Thanks for your help, by the way, it's all rather confusing!)

ukwill

9,162 posts

213 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
parapaul said:
Plotloss said:
All your sources have Stereo RCA outputs (in all probability).

You'll only be able to amplify two channels so why feed it anything more?

Using an offboard DAC will harmonise the sound across the sources to an extent but there is a connection option straight off the bat.
Finally, a guru who agrees with my POV biggrin

Either RCA from each device to the amp, or simply RCA from the TV's stereo outputs to the amp. Works very well in my limited experience - my FIL has his TV connected to his (albeit fairly high end) stereo setup and the soundstage is easily better than any 5.1 I've heard yet.
I can't quite see that myself. But horses for courses.

dalos260

199 posts

187 months

Friday 26th February 2010
quotequote all
LongLiveTazio said:
Seems sensible. What about the BR player/Sky HD though?

(Thanks for your help, by the way, it's all rather confusing!)



parapaul

2,828 posts

204 months

Saturday 27th February 2010
quotequote all
ukwill said:
parapaul said:
Plotloss said:
All your sources have Stereo RCA outputs (in all probability).

You'll only be able to amplify two channels so why feed it anything more?

Using an offboard DAC will harmonise the sound across the sources to an extent but there is a connection option straight off the bat.
Finally, a guru who agrees with my POV biggrin

Either RCA from each device to the amp, or simply RCA from the TV's stereo outputs to the amp. Works very well in my limited experience - my FIL has his TV connected to his (albeit fairly high end) stereo setup and the soundstage is easily better than any 5.1 I've heard yet.
I can't quite see that myself. But horses for courses.
yes

Only really gets used for films he really wants to watch - it is primarily a stereo system after all. He was showing off the other day, trying to persuade me not to get the 5.1 system I'm planning. Kung Fu Panda happened to be on Sky Movies Somethingorother and I was absolutely stunned to hear the sound move around the room the way it did. Not just left/right, but with real depth.

As I can't afford to spend upwards of £3k on a pair of speakers, I'll stick with my 5.1 plans thumbup

Bungleaio

6,382 posts

208 months

Wednesday 3rd March 2010
quotequote all
I've been toying with upgrading my 8 year old sony amp but the only benefit I think I'll really get is HDMI inputs. 5.1 gives great surround sound and I wouldn't want to go to 7.1 as my fish tank sits where one of the speakers would need to be.

It gets constant use though unlike the speakers in my tv, I've not used them apart from when I 1st switched the tv on and they sounded woeful.