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 | | Customer Reviews: | | | Average Customer Review: ( 45 customer reviews )
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99 of 101 found the following review helpful:
This Could Be Your Tipping Point! Oct 11, 2011
By Ryle Shermatz I offer my perspective as someone who has purchased and used several Yamaha receivers over the years, with upgrades required as the technology ratcheted up to encompass various new video capabilities, sound processing superpowers, and most recently HDMI inputs/outputs, leading up to the new HDMI 1.4 standard for 3D playback. I have NEVER fried out a Yamaha receiver--but let me hasten to add that I don't abuse them at high volume over lengthy periods of use either. Every Yamaha receiver I have owned is still in good working order as of this writing, 10/10/11.
My current reciever was/is a formidable RX-V1800, which is a mid-level dreadnought of a Yamaha receiver. But having recently purchased a 3D TV I now needed HDMI 1.4 capability to process the 3D signal. It IS of course possible to simply feed the blu-ray player (a Sony PlayStation 3 in my case) directly into the TV and enjoy the 3D picture with the TV speaker output (which certainly works), but no one could be happy with that for long. I toyed with the idea of getting an HDMI switcher so I could flip between processing a regular HDMI 1.3 signal through the RX-V1800 receiver or chanelling the 3D signals directly to the TV from my PS3, but none of the HDMI switchers I looked at explicitly said "this switcher handles the new 1.4 HDMI standard".
Ultimately I knew I'd have to get a new receiver that could handle 1.4 which I was VERY reluctant to do. My current RX-V1800 was (and is) fully functional, and I'm reluctant to mothball it so soon.
The $229 price for the RX-V371 tipped me into the buy, and though I've had it for only a short while, I think my long familiarity with Yamaha allows me to say with some confidence that this is a WINNER especially at this price. Now as you should expect, a LOT of bells and whistles have been sacrificed. There is no microphone auto-balancing of speakers, it is plain old 5.1 (no "height" channels or 7.1 options), and I hardly need to add no discrete 5.1 inputs, or inputs for VHS, tape, S-video or phono. Yamaha's sound processing modes (auditorium, jazz club,concert hall, etc) are likewise absent here. There ARE two optical audio inputs, one for TV so your TV audio gets the full spectrum playback over your speakers (if your TV is tricked out with audio return channel function you won't need this--the TV will output its audio signal through your HDMI cable). The owners' manual is provided on a CD ROM disc, which is something new to me but I suppose it's another cost-saving measure. There are four HDMI inputs and one HDMI output.
So, yes, as the price and stripped-down features summarized above suggest, this is everything you need to get a living room home theater setup going with possibly a second DVD or CD player added (along with your blu-ray player--I am presuming you wouldn't even be considering this receiver unless you had already crossed the blu-ray capability threshold).
Let me admit up front I'm not an obsessive angry audiophile who listens deliberately to find flaws, distortion, and imperfections. I'm looking for adequate volume to fill my space (14 x 28' living room) and enough muscle to get as loud as the soundtrack/music demands without rattling my windows or antagonizing the neighbors. I also want clear channel separation--L, R, surrounds & sub all working and capable of reproducing the audio engineering in a 5.1 source, or expanding a stereo source to credibly fill a 5.1 array. I have four Polk bookshelf models on ceiling shelves that sound great plus a Polk center & subwoofer.) So far (to my ears anyway) this receiver is the sonic equal of the RX-V1800 I swapped out AND it processes the 1.4 3D video signal perfectly for an unbelievably vivid 3D picture--standard 2D looks INCREDIBLE also. (You WILL need two new 1.4 HDMI cables, but those can be CHEAPLY bought right here on Amazon.)
I wanted to comment publicly on the RX-V371, because you know what? I don't think we properly appreciate how good we've got it! At my age (54) I clearly remember the primitive black & white TV's I grew up with that nevertheless held my fascination for hour after brain-rotting hour. Those crude, sawtoothed pictures and kazoo-squawky sound would be intolerable today (rabbit ears with strips of tinfoil, anyone?). Color TV took years to get it right; I flash back to 1960's early color sets oscillating between a red, blue or green tinted picture in between long fits of incurable picture roll. I don't think a proper color CRT image and broadcasting was perfected until the 1970's, just in time for VHS and Betamax to create new complications. Today we have SPECTACULAR images through blu-ray and DVD; the new flat screen TV's have NEVER been (comparatively) cheaper, larger, lighter or more idiot-proof than they are now. The concept of "home theater" never really took root until the 1980's and now it is almost simple to set up a staggering 3D system with 5.1 sound, for maybe $1,500-$2,000. That is nothing short of INCREDIBLE I think, and the new availability of sub-$300 receivers like this RX-V371 makes it even more economically realistic to take the plunge if you've been hesitating to make the jump into home theater.
The explosion of technology the RX-V371 is a part of will continue, and who knows how long before a new wave of now-unimaginable possibilities makes this obsolete. Probably sooner than we think. However we don't live in the future, we're living NOW and at $229 from Amazon, I think the RX-V371 should be an absolute "tipping point" for folks looking to upgrade their home theater experience.
52 of 52 found the following review helpful:
Excellent entry-level receiver May 16, 2011
By T. A. Clark I wanted something that would handle my gaming systems well, be great for movies and television, and be easy enough to use that my wife and kids can enjoy it without feeling intimidated. I also wanted a receiver that would be simple to maintain and manage connections on, and this has really fit the bill perfectly. Setup was incredibly simple. For a 360 and PS3 all I needed to do was just plug in the HDMI cables to the inputs on the receiver, and then another HDMI cable to the TV output, and that was it...everything was ready to go for the hookups. The display is clear and easy to understand, and speaker configuration on it is easy to configure and handled in a way that makes it a piece of cake to tweak to your liking.
If you're just looking at getting started, don't have an extravagant AV setup, and want something that sounds good and is future proof for a reasonable price I couldn't find a better way to go than with this receiver. I only have it set up with just 2 bookcase front speakers because of my living room layout, and it still sounds terrific even at low volume. It has plenty of punch and dialog is crystal clear when watching movies and television, much better than what I had before.
I'm really, really happy with it. An enthusiast might want to look at the higher end models, but for someone just trying to start a better home theater setup this is a great way to get going.
22 of 22 found the following review helpful:
Great Starting Point... Jun 05, 2011
By D. Corleone I bought this to replace my Denon AVR-1910. I knew I would be stepping down in terms of quality&performance but I seem to like this receiver better than my Denon! Yes, this is an entry-level receiver but it's great for anyone wanting to step into HT for the first time. Manual is confusing but I think I was just overthinking some things because I was so use to the Denon. Performance is great for the price. I went from a 6.1 setup down to a 3.1 and the receiver plays my Blu-rays better than I expected. Music sounds great too. I don't bother with any of the CinemaDSP stuff, I just play everything on "STRAIGHT" mode and everything sounds like its supposed to. Advice to HT beginners, get great sounding speakers first then concentrate on the receiver. This one is great if you spent most of your HT budget on speakers (like me). RECOMMENDED.
14 of 14 found the following review helpful:
solid entry-level AV receiver Jun 10, 2011
By M. Hadeishi
"synthetic zero"
I needed an entry-level AV home theater receiver to use while I was visiting another city for several months, for work. I have a higher-end Onkyo unit which I use for home theater. I got this not expecting too much, given its rock-bottom price, but I was pleasantly surprised both by the wealth of features and settings and the sound quality. It handles four HDMI inputs, is very easy to use, can do digital optical and coax audio, and even has optional Bluetooth and iPod/iPhone dock hookups. There are a vast array of DSP settings. I actually got this as part of the Yamaha home theater bundle --- again, not expecting much given the low price, but the sound quality is quite impressive for the money. Clear mids and highs for such inexpensive speakers --- the bass is a bit boomy and muddy, but you can't have everything at this price. You can hook up more expensive speakers, of course, to this unit, and get even better results.
I have to hand it to Yamaha for making such a solid entry-level unit.
8 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Sounds great! Oct 15, 2011
By E. Smith Fantastic receiver for the price! We have it connected to a new LG 55" 3D TV, Blu-ray player, DVD Recorder, Dish Receiver all through the HDMI receiver inputs with only having to connect one HDMI (output) cable to the TV. Also have POLK speakers connected and everything works great! Also, many sound options to chose from with STRAIGHT being the option most used (automatically selects digital 5.1 or pro-logic movie mode if program is not broadcast in Digital). Totally satisfied!
See all 45 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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