I know exactly what you mean about the never ending release cycle. In my case, I am not hunting for the newest, cutting edge technology. The only reason I wait for new models is to get a discount on the old ones. I just want to get informed so I don't get ripped off. For example buy the receiver at it's highest price out of fear for further price increases and after a month or two watch the prices drop just because I was not aware of something about the market.
I have actually been waiting for this moment for 2 years since I was busy building the home theater space and the pandemic didn't help speed things up
In the beginning of the year the pandemic was almost over so I thought things would go back to normal, product prices too, in a couple months. I was happy to hear that companies were taking steps to combat chip shortages and this year things were suppose to get better... Then... War....
We just can't catch a break, can we....
I was aware of the chip shortages and after a 100 euro increase in receiver prices a couple months ago I thought that was it. I never thought there would be an extra 300 euro price hike out of the blue because there are usually indications before the price of a product will increase
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You are right, we are now heading fast into a war time economy. With this new and dangerous war, following a pandemic hopefully on the wane, but even that uncertain.
So we are in for an economy that is going to see a shrinking market for luxury goods for sometime, and that may well be 10 years or more.
In wartime economies luxury goods become scarce and expensive. This is because of supply shortages and inflationary pressures. At the moment I see a reinforcing negative feedback loop developing.
I doubt there is going to be much new product for sometime.
If this is your first theater experience and you already have made expenditures, then I would buy the best unit that you can afford, now. Things are not going to improve in the short to medium turn, and very possibly the long term.
So, even now more than ever, go for quality, install it professionally with maximum protection and take care of it, as replacements may become next to impossible to obtain in the near future.
The above being said, if you possibly can go separates. I give this advice more strongly then ever. I do think AVPs are more reliable. They just are, as the commonest failures in AVRs are the output stages of the power amps, and also power supplies as they are under more stress. Don't buy multichannel amps. Get two channel rack mounted pro amps and make a professional installation. In an AVR one output transistor blowing and causing DC offset shuts your whole system down. If you buy a multichannel power amp, one blown output stage and the lot sit idle. So keep to two channel amps.
If an AVP goes down you do have some workaround options if needs be. If you use two channel amps, your whole system is not going to be dead in the water.
You have to allow for the fact that failures can happen. So in the times of scarcity I see lasting for a significant length of time, you want to avoid critical choke points from failure as far as you can. An AVR is now a critical failure risk with possible no options for getting out of trouble for some time.
Unfortunately we now are in very uncertain times, much more akin to 1939 at any time since 1945. There is no doubt in my mind about that. So now you have to act more prudently than ever. That means more sensible cautious planning than in recent years to all aspects of our lives.