Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Home Theater Receiver Reviews

!±8± Home Theater Receiver Reviews

The brain of a surround sound system is the receiver, which delivers surround sound systems, amplifiers and changing capabilities. The receiver is one of the important parts of a surround sound system because there are a lot of devices that connect to it, as well as all kinds of audio equipment like speakers, TV, VCR, CD players, DVD players, disco light and many more.

The receivers also tend to lose key audio parts that are no longer in use by the people which is "old" now like tape monitors and phono inputs. I would say Sony is one of the top selling brand names and here are other quality brand names; Kenwood, Panasonic, Pioneer, JVC, Onkyo, Yamaha, Denon and RCA. I don't know if you have noticed that all the different receiver models are now digital. Most people are more than impressed with these receivers with a flawless combination and system that eliminates all most all of the feedback and noise that passes through your surround sound system.

Here are a few tips on finding the right receiver for your home entertainment system. If you buy almost any receiver today it must have DTS (Digital true Surround) and it should be able to handle surround sound systems, what that means is that the sound coming out of your surround sound system will sound more practical to you than the monophonic option.

With the multi channel outputs you get the occasion to widen your sound to different speakers in you entertainment room and set their volumes each at a different level. By doing that you get what you call DTS (Digital Tue Surround) were you can literally hear all the different sounds approaching you from all the different speakers, angles and directions.

As for monophonic sound you can only widen one indicator to all the different channels evenly. Before you buy a receiver you should do some research on them first by finding out if the receiver that you want to buy will be compatible with your surround sound system, what that means is that you should check if your DSTV, DVD, TV, CD player and mp3 player will be able to connect in the receiver and it should deliver sound, otherwise you will have a problem.

By making your receiver that you bought the main brain of your surround sound system you will be able to manage between all the different audio/video components that you have by only using only one remote for all the components and you only have to press one button to select them.

There are a very big variety of receivers to buy you should search online for one that you like and that it do what you want it to do. If you bought one of the top brand receivers you should be able use your new receiver for all your different components in your home and send signals any place in your house without interruptions.

These receivers are great they can use multiple components at the same time so you could be watching a DVD and your children can watch a cartoon on another TV in the house and there can play a song in one of the other rooms isn't that great. Just a last piece of advice before purchasing your receiver make sure to ask about the receivers warranty just to be save in case something happens to the receiver.


Home Theater Receiver Reviews

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Marantz 4240

A fine working vintage Marantz model 4240 stereo/quadradial receiver plays test-input signals from CD. Manufactured 1974-1978, it delivers 40 W RMS per channel at 8 ohms, still providing deeper and fatter sound than today's consumer hardware with equal wattage. Not to mention the rich choice of interfaces on its back, you can choose from. You can see this in another video, "Marantz 4270", which deals of a similar type of Marantz receiver -- but with some more power output.

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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Technics SA-1010 Stereo Receiver

It's a beast. 125 watts per channel into eight ohms. Enough power to make sure everyone on the block knows where the party is. ;-) I don't know how many survive today, how many were made or what they're worth. I've seen a couple come up for auction--including an off-black colored unit--around the time this video was uploaded. This dates from approximately 1983. I bought this on eBay, found it to be in less than ideal condition and have been working at fixing it up every now and then. Even in its degraded state, it sounds good and has no problem running things right up to an unwisely loud level. Fixing it will take some time, it's pretty complex inside because of all the tinned wiring running from circuit board to circuit board. And there was shipping damage to contend with as well--at some point the space expander and slide rule tuning displays popped loose. The seller did offer to make things right. I said "forget it". There's hope, it does basically work, so why get really irritated? More seriously, this has a high quality digital tuner, New Class A Computer Drive design with discrete output transistors, lots of hookups for your equipment and a nifty looking "Space Expander" stereo expander circuit that processes the audio to make it sound like your speakers are further apart than they really are.

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