Quick first impressions..
No audio impressions yet.
After having owned the Denon 5805, 5308 and 4308, Onkyo 905 and Pioneer SC07, I was surprised at the relatively compact form and weight of the Z7... it just feels smaller and lighter, but with a bit of mass.
Packed well, and it looks as if all of the styrofoam inserts are the same, so not a lot of fumbling if you have to but it away for any reason.. (It's the small things for me, and I go through so much gear, I notice these things.)
Finish is much like the Denon's... nicer than the Onkyo. The Pioneer is very expensive looking, but it's a finger print magnet.
Was amused to see a "CAUTION: Hot Surface" warning stenciled on the top of the receiver after reading Gene's review.
AC receptacle was loose until you really pushed the cord in... now a good, snug fit.
First thing I did was turn it on and make sure it was seeing my network... it was already configured and ready to go.... tested the Web Browser interface.. very slick... nice graphics, and the receiver is very responsive to changing sources, volume, etc through this method.
I then proceeded to do the firmware update.. my unit came with 1.02.
I did it through the network... When you go into the Advanced Setup mode and scroll to the Firmware Update setting, it is on USB... I changed it sot Network and hit the button to enter... It started immediately (no searching for network, server, etc.. On the Denon it takes 20-30 seconds to check the server and then another 20 to see if there is an update...) This was instant.
Took around 15 minutes.
So a quick setup just to see if everything was connected all right...
As Gene had mentioned also, the remote must be pointed a little more precisely than other units... My gear is behind me and my theater seats to my left, so I use the wall to my right to shoot off signals... it's definitely more finicky than the Pio or Denons, but usable.
The setup menu was a little pokey, but works great.. tons of options and it seems very smart and well laid out (i.e. I noticed the video options were grayed out until I changed the video from Through to Processing... nice.)
Other than that, the unit was amazingly quick to change DSP modes and it has a great display on screen status mode that shows input, codec, DSP program, channel count, sampling rate, dialog normalization offset, etc... really quick and fast to access with one button push (unlike the Denon which make you go down into a menu tree...)
I'll do setup today, and get to the audio later.
But the last thing I'm really happy about is the quality of the video.. the unit was in pass through, and I have to say that the Blu Ray I was looking at looked amazing.. clean and pristine... I had just taken the Denon 4308 out earlier, and my memory was that the Denon had a little haze on it, even though the processing was supposedly "off." The look of the picture reminded me of my old Anthem D2 in the best way... maybe it was the fatigue (I did this late last night) but I know that I'm going to be thrilled with the video on this (I also checked out Directv upscaled to 1080p and it also looked fantastic.)...
Long post, with nit pick details, but I'll keep it coming...