SonomaComa
New Member
I am in the process of choosing between the Yamaha RX-V475 and the Denon AVR-X1000. Both list for approx. $450.00. The Yamaha does have a MHL HDMI Input, the Denon does not. From what I have been reading is the Audyssey MutEQ XT will calibrate the Sub and that YPAO does not but certain versions will. What different versions of YPAO are there?
And after running the Room Calibration the Yamaha can still be fine tuned and tweaked to the users liking while the Audyssey cannot. From what I've read and experienced from my Marantz SR6007, if you are not happy with the Audyssey's calibration too bad you just have get used to it.
It seems like Yamaha has a huge faithful Fan Club that raves about their products. Is the sound quality between the two really that much different? The system will be mostly for 90% music and 10% (if that) for movies. It is going to start out as just a two channel system for now and a sub will be added down the line. But why add a sub if the receiver can't calibrate it. Some reviews say the Yamaha is better for music but it will only calibrate the low frequencies down to a certain level . Connecting iTunes devices will be used, A C.D. player will be added and streaming Pandora will be from a Roku.
For this type of setup will one room calibration have and advantage over the other? Does one really sound better than the other for music? I'm just not sure what would really be the deciding factor beings they are so closely priced.
And after running the Room Calibration the Yamaha can still be fine tuned and tweaked to the users liking while the Audyssey cannot. From what I've read and experienced from my Marantz SR6007, if you are not happy with the Audyssey's calibration too bad you just have get used to it.
It seems like Yamaha has a huge faithful Fan Club that raves about their products. Is the sound quality between the two really that much different? The system will be mostly for 90% music and 10% (if that) for movies. It is going to start out as just a two channel system for now and a sub will be added down the line. But why add a sub if the receiver can't calibrate it. Some reviews say the Yamaha is better for music but it will only calibrate the low frequencies down to a certain level . Connecting iTunes devices will be used, A C.D. player will be added and streaming Pandora will be from a Roku.
For this type of setup will one room calibration have and advantage over the other? Does one really sound better than the other for music? I'm just not sure what would really be the deciding factor beings they are so closely priced.