Thanks for the reply!
Good advice on mixing brands. I think the subwoofer might be the only speaker I might need to find from a different brand, but I want to stay with the same brand of speakers, if possible.
Good point on budget - I didn't mention it before. I know I don’t want to spend more than $10,000 on an A/V receiver and speakers for a single Dolby Atmos 3.1.2 system. If I go with the best speakers from the brands listed in my original post and a good A/V receiver that supports 3.1.2 with 4 HDMI 2.1 inputs, I hope it will be under that amount.
Question:
Do you know any A/V receivers that support Dolby Atmos 3.1.2?
I have researched Denon, Marantz, Yamaha, and Sony. The issue that I'm seeing is that either the speaker / amp configuration will disable the height speakers if the L/R surround speakers are disabled or the owner's manual is vague in regards to speaker / amp configuration and Dolby Atmos 3.1.2 support.
You probably already know that when the A/V receiver processes the
Dolby Atmos ADM data of the digital waveform from the source, the speaker / amp configuration of the A/V receiver must know what speakers are enabled and where they are generally located in order to render the appropriate waveform to the appropriate speaker. In other words, you can't purchase an 7.2 A/V receiver that supports only a Dolby Atmos 5.1.2 configuration and not connect two of the speakers. This won't work since the processor will try and render the audio objects to all 7 speakers whether they are connected or not. Calibration doesn't solve this either - its simply measurements used by the A/V amplifier to adjust the volume for each individual speaker based on the location of the "best seat in the house".
Unfortunately, Dolby Atmos 3.1.2 does not seem to be a popular configuration, so I'm just trying to find out from anyone on the forum if anyone knows of a receiver that supports this configuration.