Monday, January 25, 2010

Receivers Review Excellent Review Book Do I Need To Upgrade My Receiver?

Do I need to upgrade my receiver? - receivers review excellent review book

I have a Yamaha 5550 for about 6 years. I bought a 50-inch Pioneer plasma (last Captivi outside the box) and a Blu-ray DVD Pioneer. For maximum performance my receiver, as he HTDV. All comments on the consignee are very positive. Otherwise, spend $ 500 on a pioneer of the current or Yamaha receiver? What do u fans of home theater?

4 comments:

Bauss19 said...

I agree with the reaction of others. All these brands are great. I have a Pioneer receiver. Its great. Look 1080p upscaling for old components and ensure that new components that you have enough HDMI inputs.

In addition, make sure that the recipient is you do not "going through HDMI, it only via an HDMI video support, no video and sound.

I added an HDMI wiki for more information.

agb90spr... said...

I, you believe that non-HDMI HDTV.

) However, with one exception (see the last paragraph, that's right ... For maximum efficiency, you need to upgrade your receiver. If it is worth quite a different question. If you have a good surround speakers in May is worth the upgrade from the receiver to use to make their cutting-edge Blu-ray. BUT, many consumers are much improved, and not upgrade a good investment to an otherwise good receiver. The money could be better used to improve the speakers.

Note that you can be the advanced audio formats on Blu-ray discs (no DVD ... you will continue to play to get), and always get DD 5.1 or DTS, even if you do not TrueHD, etc.

There is no compelling reason to use a HDMI receiver other than the benefits of conversion and simplified wiring. HDMI BD player on television a big task for the video (using the TV menu, select the inputs) and optical connection on the surround receiver you get (like DD, DTS) sound.

Depending on what PioneER BD is that you will be in a position where the internal decoder and can multi-channel analog outputs of the BD player to multiple analog inputs (6 or 8 RCA inputs for front-feed, surround (s) sub and central) in the receiver (if necessary) and take advantage of Dolby TrueHD, etc.) In this way (instead of the decoder in a new receiver. If the decoder internal BD drive and analogue outputs and your receiver has no entries that match, perhaps you can play using a receiver with them for much less money than a new HDMI 1.3 receivers.

canderto... said...

To get the most out of your system, you should change your receiver to get his full HD with Blu Ray. And if I choose between Pioneer and Yamaha would probably choose Pioneer. But I can not really go wrong with either. Denon and Onkyo are also two very good brands.

canderto... said...

To get the most out of your system, you should change your receiver to get his full HD with Blu Ray. And if I choose between Pioneer and Yamaha would probably choose Pioneer. But I can not really go wrong with either. Denon and Onkyo are also two very good brands.

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