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Hello im looking for a good Ht and music receiver I was thinking about buying The Yamaha Rx V2300 wich is about 1400$ Can. Do you guy's have any opinion before I go and by it. Will I be better off with something else. Im about 50/50 music/ht.
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I don't know how this would convert to CAN$, but the new NAD T752 is 80wx5 for US$899. Eventually, you could add a C270, US$599, (probably available used) for the fronts which would take some pressure off the T752's power supply.
I considered the V2300 and the V1300 as well. They both have a lot of features and I am sure the V2300 is a quality HT receiver. However, since you mentioned that you will also be using the receiver for music...then you might want to look at the Rotel 1055. It has all of the HT bells and whistles but fewer of the unnecessary (IMO)features of the Yamaha. It may be a little more expensive than the 2300 however....
I took a look at the rotel 1055 earlier, but the power of this amps is lacking, only 75 watts/ 0.09 Harmonic distortion.
Go listen for yourself. Forget the specs. Rotel sounds better than the Yamaha.
Might be better sounding but like I said I need power. I currently have a Yamaha that push 75 Watts/ 0.08 and its not Enough. the Rotel is the same with 0.09 harmonic distortion.
Well ill try to find a store who carry it, and listen up.
Which speakers are you using? Why do you say you don't have enough power?
"Might be better sounding but like I said I need power. I currently have a Yamaha that push 75 Watts/ 0.08 and its not Enough. the Rotel is the same with 0.09 harmonic distortion"The 75wpc Rotel might actually have MORE power than the 110wpc Yamaha. Rotel measures their power very conseratively. Unfortunately, one of the most common shell games in the mid-fi AV receiver market these days is the inflation of power ratings. It all depends on how the power ratings are determined. There has been considerable discussion on this topic at the AVSForum http://www.avsforum.com. Yamaha is by no means the only one to do this....and I would not dismiss the Yamaha necessarily for this reason. They are not really falisfying the measurements they are just being very selective in the way they are making them.
Again, there may be other reasons to choose the Yamaha over the Rotel 1055 but power is not one of them...IMO. But really, you do need to try to do a head to head comparison...preferably in your listening room and then judge for yourself.
Agree. A lot of mass market receivers, my Onkyo included I was disgusted to find out, can meet there published specs with two channels driven but not all five. Even if they say it's all channels driven. Technically, each amplifier channel in a mass market receiver can produce the rated power. When you run all five, the power supply runs out of juice and the power drops SIGNIFICALLY. Like more than half on some units. Every now and then you can run across a test in a review for this. The NAD, and I assume Rotel, rate their products under the worst possible scenario, so do meet their rated power in all channels. Unlike Skullmurdoc, I do feel this is fraudrulent and the industry needs to police itself better before someone gets the bright idea the government needs to be involved. If you have relatively effecient speakers, this power game is not as big a concern.
Why the hell do you say
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(Unlike Skullmurdoc, I do feel this is fraudrulent and the industry needs to police itself...)I never say that this aint true I didnt know that the 75 Watt power could be more powerfull than 110 that's all. Did you even read what I type?
http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Hollow/3401/ratevsac.htmThis is a link that shows various models/brands of receivers and the decrepencies of their power ratings/measurements.
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