It's up to the procurer to verify that the chips they order work as promised, Denon in this case. When we order new chips we do much testing, though, our case is much simpler. On the other hand Denon is far, far bigger...
While I don't disagree with you, Trell, and I am by no means an expert at this, Sound United and Yamaha both have this problem. Anthem is about to drop their new gear. Who else?
Is Panasonic(Nuvoton) the only supplier for this?
What I see is an unfortunate rush forward on all counts. This particular one seems to be driven by the new Consoles in the gaming market more than anything else.
The AVS thread has some good dialog about this:
The quick rundown: 2020 AVRs with HDMI 2.1 Panasonic chips seem to display a black screen when pushing 4k/120 and 8k/60 through them. This is a hardware problem, so no firmware updates will fix it. Marantz, Denon, Yamaha use the chips in their 2020 and upcoming 2021 lineups. Sony, Pioneer and...
www.avsforum.com
And this from the cat's at ASR:
Not audio related, but certainly of interest for (potential) buyers... ==== AV-Receiver: HDMI 2.1 Bug macht Probleme mit Xbox Series X & RTX 3000 AV receiver: HDMI 2.1 bug causes problems with Xbox Series X & RTX 3000 [Google translated]
www.audiosciencereview.com
Would like to see
@M Code chime in here, if you are willing, please.
I really see this rush to get to market with support prior to anybody being able to adequately test. To me, Panasonic is at fault for not being on top of their product. The embarrassment that SU and Yamaha should be experiencing for not doing their own due diligence ought to be measured by tonnage, and true, they share blame as well. I am by no means trying to defend Denon!
I'm also curious to know if Microsoft and Sony worked with any of the AVR companies to discover if the products would work seamlessly.
No matter how you cut it and whether you like it or not, this is one of the major flaws, both, with rushing products to market and early adoption.