Originally posted by: CFster
Well, its a Kenwood and it's refurbished. What more really needs to be said...
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
You can check for a Sovereign review at www.soundandvisionmag.com For that price I'd spend another $100 and get a Denon 2803 brand-new from www.crutchfield.com with 2-year warranty and 30-day no-hassle return policy.
Originally posted by: Desslok
Originally posted by: CFster
Well, its a Kenwood and it's refurbished. What more really needs to be said...
Do you have any data to back up your claim?
Originally posted by: CFster
Nope. Just a personal opinion.Originally posted by: DesslokDo you have any data to back up your claim?Originally posted by: CFster Well, its a Kenwood and it's refurbished. What more really needs to be said...
Originally posted by: GoodDad
how about telling us what all you want your receiver to do?
Originally posted by: Desslok
Originally posted by: GoodDad
how about telling us what all you want your receiver to do?
Good point. Sorry about that.
I have a an open den. 20 feet or so long and it open up onto the kitchen area so call it 20 feet or so in width. The ceiling angles up starting at 7 feet and goes up to about 15 feet.
95% DVD's/Consoles/regular tv and 5% CD's in a changer.
Originally posted by: GoodDad
no need to get that much of a receiver then. Look at the onkyo txsr601. It can be had for very cheap (I think Ecost sells the refurbs even.) It has dual room capabilities to handle your kitchen and den. Plenty of inputs for cd/dvd/satelite. It doesnt sound like you have a huge area to fill, it should give you plenty of power. It also has prologic 2, which will give you 5 channel surround off an analog source like satelite/cable/vcr. A/V is like cars, you can always get better. The question is how much you are looking to spend. EDIT: $304 shippedOriginally posted by: DesslokGood point. Sorry about that. I have a an open den. 20 feet or so long and it open up onto the kitchen area so call it 20 feet or so in width. The ceiling angles up starting at 7 feet and goes up to about 15 feet. 95% DVD's/Consoles/regular tv and 5% CD's in a changer.Originally posted by: GoodDad how about telling us what all you want your receiver to do?
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
How expensive are your speakers? If you've spent less than about $800 on speakers I'd say you'd be fine with the $300 Pioneer VSX-D914K deal at www.GottaDeal.com, though the Denon I recommended has several more s-video inputs than the Pioneer if you need more than 3 in pack / 1 in front. The Denon would be excellent for speakers costing up to several thousand.
Originally posted by: Desslok
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
How expensive are your speakers? If you've spent less than about $800 on speakers I'd say you'd be fine with the $300 Pioneer VSX-D914K deal at www.GottaDeal.com, though the Denon I recommended has several more s-video inputs than the Pioneer if you need more than 3 in pack / 1 in front. The Denon would be excellent for speakers costing up to several thousand.
Still looking at speakers. The whole system I want to be under 1k.(ie reciever, speakers, sub)
for a receiver and 5.1 speaker system? Then you definitely need to stick with a $300 receiver instead of something more expensive.Still looking at speakers. The whole system I want to be under 1k.(ie reciever, speakers, sub)
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
for a receiver and 5.1 speaker system? Then you definitely need to stick with a $300 receiver instead of something more expensive.Still looking at speakers. The whole system I want to be under 1k.(ie reciever, speakers, sub)
With only $700 for 5.1 speakers, Energy is one good brand.
Also consider waiting another month or two so you can perhaps budget $1100-1200 total ($800-900 for speakers). Every extra $100 you can put towards the speakers will make a real difference up until at least $800. Just like with processors the gain per dollar starts to decline, but $800 is a very reasonable price for a decent 5.1 speaker system.
If you just want a stereo system then a $700 speaker budget is fine.
Agreed, or the Pioneer plus PolkOriginally posted by: GoodDad
Please note: he could go with the Onkyo receiver and the Polk speakers and have a very nice setup for under $800.
Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Agreed, or the Pioneer plus PolkOriginally posted by: GoodDad Please note: he could go with the Onkyo receiver and the Polk speakers and have a very nice setup for under $800.. I'm really happy with the Polk RT55's in my living room and the Polk RT28i's in my home office, both purchased from Crutchfield (last year and several years ago).
Originally posted by: GroundedSailor
If you want to spend 1K on the system then keep a major protion for the speakers.
Check this out Sony STRDE895B Surround Receiver
Its a very nice unit for about $250 shipped - which will leave your more to spend on better speakers.
Also check the store's Resellerrating score of 9.43
Originally posted by: GoodDad
please dont order sony for home audio. Get Apex to make you a receiver before you buy a sony one.
Originally posted by: GroundedSailor
Originally posted by: GoodDad
please dont order sony for home audio. Get Apex to make you a receiver before you buy a sony one.
I'm curious as to why you say that.
THD 0.7%
Originally posted by: GoodDad
thats ten times what an onkyo/denon/hk will put out. Distortion is your enemy. Also they overrate their power. When we tell people about sony's power, we tell them its rated in WLS (when lightning strikes.) They also seem to break more than others.THD 0.7%
So now power, high distortion, and they break alot.
