Best sounding receiver <250$ ?

2»

Comments

  • ViperZ
    ViperZ Posts: 2,046
    edited November 2009
    Older Denon (say 3803) and Marantz (7500?).
    Panasonic PT-AE4000U projector for movies
    Carada 106" Precision Series (Classic Cinema White)
    Denon AVR-X3600H pre/pro
    Outlaw 770 7-channel amplifier
    B&W CDM1-SE fronts
    B&W CDM-CNT center
    B&W CDM1 rears on MoPADs
    JBL SP8CII in-ceiling height speakers
    Samsung DTB-H260F OTA HDTV tuner
    DUAL NHT SubTwo subwoofers
    Oppo BDP-93 Blu-Ray player
    Belkin PF60 Power Center
    Harmony 1100 RF remote with RF extender
    Sony XBR-X950G 55" 4K HDR Smart TV + PS3 in the living room
  • rdb2001
    rdb2001 Posts: 791
    edited November 2009
    My vote is for the HK 254. I used one as a pre/pro and for its features and pricepoint on their ebay store, I dont think you will find a better receiver. Nice warm sound. The only reason I sold it, was because I want to see what the pioneer elite hype is all about. It served me well though.
  • cnh
    cnh Posts: 13,284
    edited November 2009
    TNTsTunes wrote: »
    I have a 8.1 Yamaha RS-V3000 I use and love it. It doesn't have HDMI ports but does have optical inputs. I love the 8 channel Stereo mode for music. It had a $1999.00 list price when new.

    I also have a Yamaha 7.2 DSP-3090 that is a great reciever. It doesn't have HDMI ports but does have optical inputs. This has mono and stereo sub outputs. It had a $2499.00 list price when new.

    I sold my Yamaha RS-V870 5.1 recently and miss it. It was an old analog 5.1 design but had such a great warm full sound. I should have kept it, but I wanted the optical inputs the other units use.

    Good quality used units are a bargain and blow any new ones out of the water for way less money.

    Either can be bought for less then $250.00 used.

    Can't disagree there...but those are pretty old AVRs....the price of a similar Yamaha that's only a few years old will probably hold at 4-500 dollars or more...my 2 year old Denon STILL SELLS FOR 550???? And that's only an 1100 New.....some AVRs depreciate less than others....Denons are one, for example. And there have been 'improvements' in surround processing in AVRs in recent years....NEW chip sets that are cleaner and faster, new processing. etc.

    Old gear still has good power but it's better for 2 channel more so than HT where you do need to stay fairly current.

    cnh
    Currently orbiting Bowie's Blackstar.!

    Polk Lsi-7s, Def Tech 8" sub, HK 3490, HK HD 990 (CDP/DAC), AKG Q701s
    [sig. changed on a monthly basis as I rotate in and out of my stash]
  • TNTsTunes
    TNTsTunes Posts: 751
    edited November 2009
    cnh wrote: »
    Can't disagree there...but those are pretty old AVRs....the price of a similar Yamaha that's only a few years old will probably hold at 4-500 dollars or more...my 2 year old Denon STILL SELLS FOR 550???? And that's only an 1100 New.....some AVRs depreciate less than others....Denons are one, for example. And there have been 'improvements' in surround processing in AVRs in recent years....NEW chip sets that are cleaner and faster, new processing. etc.

    Old gear still has good power but it's better for 2 channel more so than HT where you do need to stay fairly current.

    cnh

    The RS-V3000 and the DSP-3090 both were top of the line models and still hold there own against a ton of new AVR's.

    They both have 4 ohm stable amps and many sweet soundfields.

    I like having the rear center channel the RS-V3000 has, it has a great 8 channel stereo soundfield also. For music the 8 channel surround is much nicer the a 2 channel rig IMO. I do run seperate amps with it to give my SDA's more Kick.

    The DSP-3090 is nice because it has even more soundfields and a better chip (but lacks the 8 channel surround effect) and has stereo subwoofer outputs.
    "Make a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Light
    a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life."


  • LandShark
    LandShark Posts: 130
    edited November 2009

    TV: Samsung LN40A550
    Mains: Polk Monitor 70's
    Center: Polk CS2
    Surrounds: Polk OWM3's
    Receiver: Onkyo TX sr705
    BDP: Sony S350
    Subs: Velodyne VRP1200 and VRP1000
    Monster Power Conditioner EP IR 2450
  • domflane
    domflane Posts: 653
    edited November 2009
    If you're looking to save money, be patient and start looking around. Just make sure the AVR you decide on has enough inputs for all your sources and preouts for future expansion. I vote for the HK as well, they offer a lot of features for the price and are pretty powerful considering their wattage ratings. I found my AVR354 as a floor model and got it for $280 with an extended warranty, so the deals are out there . . .
    Home Theater
    RTiA5 - CSiA6 - FXiA6 - PSW650 - Pioneer Elite SC-55 - Carver AV-505 - Sony 46" 120Hz - Monster HP 2400 - Xbox 360 - Playstation 3
    2 Channel
    Polk RTA 15TL - Harman Kardon HK3485 - HK DVD48 - Signal Cable IC's and speaker cables
  • RutgersFTW
    RutgersFTW Posts: 458
    edited November 2009
    I'll throw the Panasonic SA-BX500 class-D receiver into the ring. It can be found for $250, has 3 HDMI ins and decodes all the formats etc... it's quite powerful and nice.
    Currently listening to:

    Marantz SR5004
    Sony BDP-S370
    Apple TV V2
    Audio Technica AT-LP120
    Mirage CMD-5 x 5
    Bic H-100
  • steveinaz
    steveinaz Posts: 19,545
    edited November 2009
    Be sure to check http://www.audioadvisor.com as they have a few NAD AVR's at crazy low sale prices lately. Probably worth stretching the budget just a bit further...Check their "Clearance" items pages.
    Source: Bluesound Node 2i - Preamp/DAC: Benchmark DAC2 DX - Amp: Parasound Halo A21 - Speakers: MartinLogan Motion 60XTi - Shop Rig: Yamaha A-S501 Integrated - Source: Rotel CD14MkII CD Player - Speakers: Elac Debut 2.0 B5.2