Hello all,
Thank you for taking a moment to browse this multi-faceted questioning thread, and I do apologize for the agony of the repeats that some of you may be ever so tired of seeing pop up.
There is a TL;DR summary at the bottom for those that don't have the time or will to read this text wall. Thank you for at least looking.
I'm soon to build a new space on my property and will be able to have a better ability to have a space for my home theater and audio needs in general in the form of a
second living room. I'm not rolling in money, so this is not an elaborate thing other than just having a second large room in the house that can be dedicated to audio in general. I'm not sure on the total size yet, but it will be standard ceiling heights (in the USA at least) of around 8 feet and I'm going to see if I can push towards a 30 feet x 20 feet or similar size space for this second room, opting for my other living room to be smaller and without all the gizmos of audio.
I'm at a crossroads in terms of deciding if I want to get a new AVR that can maybe handle most of the work, if not all of it, with efficient loads or if I want to go ahead and get an AVR or Processor with pre-amp output for at least the front mains and center and use discrete amplifiers for the speakers. I've been under the impression that an AVR can handle most smaller speakers just fine, but maybe larger speakers or setups with lots of drivers involved (say, 20+ drivers?) perhaps there's something different going on there? My previous 7.2 AVR with pre-amp output finally gave up the ghost a while back, and I've yet to replace it. I have been using a temp AVR in its place just doing stereo lately while waiting on this new build.
I have a very modest setup, nothing fancy, extremely entry based, but it sounds decent and I have a large array of speakers that fill a room nicely.
My now-dead AVR was the Pioneer VSX1121K (7.2 with 110wpc). I got it because it had decent output but also because it had the full array of pre-amp outputs so I could use discrete amplifiers as I fleshed things out. This AVR is now dated and cannot handle 4k and all that scaling with HDMI and doesn't have real time interface, its old, so that's ok. I don't mind replacing it. It's time. It still works, but it goes silent and displays an error code on the front after a while. Not worth fixing every few weeks with a heat gun, from what I've read. I'd rather go ahead and go modern finally. Since it died, I've been using a basic Yamaha RX V385 as a stereo AVR basically, as it allowed 4k (HTPC is my head source) and was dirt cheap while I wait to figure out what I want to do in my new upcoming space. So I have the freedom of selecting a new AVR or processor/amps at this point in time.
My modest little speaker line up is (for home theater and couch coop gaming with the kids):
Polk Monitor 70 II's x 3 (Left, Right and Center all matching towers)
Polk Monitor 50 II's x 4 (surrounds and back surrounds, all towers)
Polk Monitor 40 II's x 2 (additional surrounds or heights)
Polk Monitor 30 II's x 2 (additional surrounds or maybe use these on the ceiling at an entry to Atmos?)
BICF12 12" Sub x 2
PSW505 12" Sub x 2
3x Audiosource AMP-100 amplifiers (50 watt @ 8ohm stereo class A amps; these bridge to 150 watt @ 8ohm monoblocks); I had used them before for the M70II's discretely
Dead VSX1121K (needs to be replaced)
It's basically a 7.4 setup and I have extra speakers. I have lots of towers to avoid stands and tables and they tend to handle lower frequencies a little better.
Goal is to potentially have a 30x20 room or something close to that in the near future. We are building.
One of my main questions is.... can a newer AVR handle pushing the Monitor 70 II's (and all of that above) or would I be better off using discrete amplifiers for those? I am not looking to spend a ton as they're just entry towers and they're fairly efficient, but I already have several
AudioSource AMP-100 amplfiers and I have tested them bridged and ran each M70II on 150watt mono blocks and they sounded different, better, more full, than how they sounded on just the AVR (with rated 110wpc); and I made sure they were set to full with no sub to have a fair evaluation and were not being treated as small speakers by the AVR. But, maybe there's really no difference? Maybe the AVR was only feeding 35~55wpc and the bridged amp was truly feeding out 120~140wpc and that's the main difference? I'm not sure. Conventional wisdom seems to be that AVR's don't output their advertised specs of course.
So naturally, this begs the question of whether to get an AVR with enough output to handle the above speakers on its own in a 20x30 room, or go for an AVR with pre-amp output and let the AVR handle all surrounds and let the monoblock 150 watt amps handle the mains and center. Or, go for a discrete encoder without any amplification and get discrete amplification for all of the speakers (in which case I will need 2 or 3 more amplifiers, as 50 watt stereo amps will easily drive the smaller efficient surround speakers). And of course, I'm at the point where I could introduce a little Atmos to this. I'm not interested in a 16 channel setup, as it's just not there yet. But I wouldn't mind at least playing around with an overhead voice of god type Atmos setup, just to have a taste. So maybe a 7.4.2 setup ultimately. I don't think I care to go farther than 2 Atmos speakers overhead at this time.
Some AVR's I'm looking at currently, assuming the AVR is enough to power the above speakers in a 7.4.2 or 9.4 setup depending on if I bother with a single overhead of Atmos or not:
Marantz SR6013
www.accessories4less.com
Integra DRX-4.2
www.accessories4less.com
Yamaha RX-V2085
www.accessories4less.com
If the above are not enough to handle all the above speakers in those configurations, they have pre-amp output and I can off load the work of the mains and center to my AMP-100 amps.
Or, I could go ahead with a Processor that is not an AVR, but I can't seem to find much between the 7.2 (like
Emotivas) and 16 channel options so the range goes from $700 (Emotiva) to $4k (Monolith, Emotiva, etc, 16 channel) just to get Atmos with the ability to do 7.4.2 or just 9.4 as the main goal options. And then I would just add 2 or 3 more amplifiers to handle the surround speakers as they will not require much to do their jobs. I could either add three more
AMP-100's so everything matches ($375 total maybe). Or I could add a single
Emotiva BasX A-700 (7 channel 80 watts @ 8ohm all channels driven; $599). One of those two options would handle the other 6 speakers (either 4 surrounds and 2 atmos, or just 6 surrounds).
So that's it in a nutshell. I do thank you for reading this far, I realize it's a text wall.
TL;DR
Given the above modest speakers with a goal of 7.4.2 (Atmos) or a 9.4 setup, would you use (Option A) a modern AVR to output to everything, or would you go with (Option B) an AVR with pre-amp output and discrete amplifiers for the mains and center, or finally would go with (Option C) a processor with 4k and Atmos and enough channels to achieve the goals listed and an all discrete amplifier line up.
Thank you again for your time.
Very best,