Ever since my extremely bad experience with Logitech I've decided that I'll never buy another Logitech product. Their customer support being utterly horrendous makes it literally impossible for me to trust them. I've had the Z-5500 system which is now broken (the main receiver/POD unit died) and now I've figured out how to replace it with a receiver.
However, finding a receiver isn't as easy as I thought. There are TONS of specifications and things to learn that can drive a newbie coming into this crazy. Basically, I'm looking for something that will provide decent sound quality for my gaming and movie needs. I've learned that the ".2" isn't really always necessary and you could use two subs hooked up with a Y cable, and that you can double wire a speaker to send it more power.
However, I've been confused with how the receiver knows how much power to send out a speaker without blowing it out. The logitech surround speakers I have are 65 watts RMS each (I think at least that's what it says on their website) and most receivers send more power than this. Does this mean my speakers will blow out at higher volumes or what exactly does this mean?
Also, my biggest question has to do with Video Up-scaling. I thought this was important at first but I don't watch DVDs at all. I would only watch movies through my PC and wouldn't my PC do the up-scaling as best as it can? I mean true it may make standard definition tv look better but I rarely watch that and don't care about it too much anyway as I'm hoping that'll phase itself out eventually anyway.
So basically my questions are, if I'm watching movies mostly through my PC hooked up to my TV should I worry about video upscaling?
How much power should I be looking for to get on a receiver?
And what factors can screw up sound quality when it comes to speaker placement and other things? Like, can having my speakers too close together(right now they're closer since I haven't put them up surrounding me, affect them a lot?
I must sound like an idiot when it comes to this considering how in-depth speakers can go but any help would be great.
However, finding a receiver isn't as easy as I thought. There are TONS of specifications and things to learn that can drive a newbie coming into this crazy. Basically, I'm looking for something that will provide decent sound quality for my gaming and movie needs. I've learned that the ".2" isn't really always necessary and you could use two subs hooked up with a Y cable, and that you can double wire a speaker to send it more power.
However, I've been confused with how the receiver knows how much power to send out a speaker without blowing it out. The logitech surround speakers I have are 65 watts RMS each (I think at least that's what it says on their website) and most receivers send more power than this. Does this mean my speakers will blow out at higher volumes or what exactly does this mean?
Also, my biggest question has to do with Video Up-scaling. I thought this was important at first but I don't watch DVDs at all. I would only watch movies through my PC and wouldn't my PC do the up-scaling as best as it can? I mean true it may make standard definition tv look better but I rarely watch that and don't care about it too much anyway as I'm hoping that'll phase itself out eventually anyway.
So basically my questions are, if I'm watching movies mostly through my PC hooked up to my TV should I worry about video upscaling?
How much power should I be looking for to get on a receiver?
And what factors can screw up sound quality when it comes to speaker placement and other things? Like, can having my speakers too close together(right now they're closer since I haven't put them up surrounding me, affect them a lot?
I must sound like an idiot when it comes to this considering how in-depth speakers can go but any help would be great.