Even when FM was king
any manufacturer that made a receiver had a
superior model that was an integrated amp with a separate tuner. There are hundreds of examples out there. The integrated usually had superior
everything internally vs the receiver. Times have not changed that dramatically to alter this business model.
Not only that, most of the stand alone tuners out there have always been dramatically better than the tuners available in the comparable receiver of that brand. But both were surely better than the poor excuse for a Tuner that is found in AVRs today.
And I'm not even getting into phono stages if they still even put them in there. I know my Denon 3803 has one but it is terrible.
Receivers have always been and still are a
compromise. Why would someone buy a receiver over an integrated if they don't need all the extra features? I know I wouldn't trade filter capacitance, quality heatsinks, more robust outputs and reduced complexity for features I don't need or want. Sure, if I need to run video through it I'll get a receiver, if not- why?
I challenge anyone to go to the bottom of the page in the link below and look at the tuners in the rankings. Then find me a receiver from the same manufacturer (or any manufacturer then or now) that has an equivalent tuner. (especially the higher ranked tuners). Or find the matching integrated and show me the comparable receiver that is better.
http://www.fmtunerinfo.com/standings.html
Usually, as goes the reduced tuner quality in these receivers (all-in one units) so do the amp sections and everything else in there. BTW when these tuners were made the Receiver was king (at least in America) so the sales volume/cost argument I hear so often about AVRs is a moot point.
Are there isolated unscrupulous examples out there? Sure, but that is not the norm.