I have looked at that thread. I asked you about what you have seen. Even the expensive stuff. Knowing what works, what doesn't is important. These AVR's exist at multiple different price points. What is the best sounding components you have heard of the AVR's? What are the tradeoffs you have seen? Extending beyond the limits of the prior thread you reference, what about Cambridge Audio, Rotel, Arcam, Anthem in addition to the prior products mentioned. If you sell the stuff, I am certain you develop preferences, but you also should know personally how each brand stacks. Stereo is far more straight forward. From what I have seen that is Benchmark media. But they don't do AVR decoding to surround system specifications. What is the easiest to set up, what requires extensive knowledge to even begin to configure. What I don't want is a bunch of bells and whistles of multiple sources but a KISS type of equipment to drive a 7.1 system. I don't want to get into Atmos. Would buying used be a good option?
Aside from that, what in different price points works and why? Mazer is suggesting in the $1000 range the Denon 3600/3700 AVR's, You have suggested the Yamaha 3080, I have suggested the Anthem MRX-740. Given in $1000 dollar increments what would you choose and why in each bracket from 1K to 10K? On Crutchfield's site there is a lot of choices from the following Sony, Denon, Marantz, Arcam, Anthem, NAD, Yamaha, and Onkyo. I have heard of Bryston, Moon Audio, Rotel, Cambridge Audio, McIntosh, and I am certain there are others. I have never found a comprehensive 3rd party discussion on what is out there, and where the different price points intersect and where they diverge. If something is worthy, it is worth going for. What I often get here is buy this, it is cheap. What I don't see a lot of is what is exactly offered and what the comparison contrasts are.
I don't have the means of testing all this stuff as I cannot afford to by several $100K+ worth of product to come to a final solution. I tend to look at specification first but there is so much marketing crap, I am having problems figuring out what should be the gold or silver amongst the lead ore out there (so to speak). What I need driven is a 7.1 surround system easy to administer, and reasonable functionality. I don't subscribe to streaming services so that is not important. I do listen to CD's I own as well as Bluray DVD's I own. I have an older LG 1080P 42 inch TV I use and I have a cable box and have determined that there are at least 2 different types of Dolby encoding on that. As I list above, I have a set of good Paradigm speakers and I have reasonable hearing at this point. What I want is to select the source, put on the CD/DVD/Cable and listen using my speakers with the audio streams decoded properly to 7.1 surround to enjoy what I have. If I don't have to spend $3K I would be happy with the result if it just works. If I need to spend more, I may need to rethink things, but I want to know that also. I am looking for the best solution that sounds good, very low noise, easy to administer, and that is at a good price.