Here's my small review of my new system of the AV7005 / MM7055! Introducing:
THE SYSTEM!
TV: Philips Aurea (not new)
Fronts: Phonar P5.5 Veritas Edma Cap+ (new, replacing P3's)
Surrounds: Phonar M3 Edma (not new)
Processor: Marantz AV7005 (new, replacing Marantz SR6003)
Amp: Marantz MM7055 (new, replacing Marantz SR6003)
Vinyl: Marantz TT42 (new)
Discs: Marantz BD7003 (not new)
Whoop, there it is!
It's a.... It's a.... BIG BOY! Congratulations!
Construction and build quality
I replaced my Marantz SR6003, so I'm not sure if I've got a strong opinion about build quality and appearance. Or have I? I'm a sucker for Marantz's design. It's clean. No buttons all over the place. I love how I can hide the display from sight. On Dutch forums people ***** about how illogic it is to hide a display behind a panel. I really prefer the clean look and don't mind opening up a panel. IMO, It kinda adds to the experience of operating this behemoth.
The unit's front is metal. The cheeks on the side are plastic, but very good looking. I did damage a cheek on my previous SR6003, though. Obviously plastic materials scratches more easily. Then again, who flies a R/C helicopter into their €1000 AV receiver? Well, I did.
Never you mind! My room is a strict no-fly zone now!
Installing
This is something I don't really enjoy. Plugging every thing in, connecting speaker wires, triple checking polarity and all that. The experience of finally being able to plugging in XLR cables into my very own HT equipment is... Priceless. My friends agree, though they thought it was cool seeing a lot of fat cables sticking out. The AV7005 is surprisingly light. The MM7055 is as heavy as it is expensive. I love the way it gave me a hernia when I rescued it from its box. Two thumbs up!
I wish the AV7005 had a couple s-video inputs, though. I mean, come on! Composite video? Brrr!!! I decided to upgrade my cable subscription to HD just to get a set top box with HDMI. Problem solved, but I do think it's an oversight. You can go from s-video to composite without issues. Enough adapters on the market too. But not having any s-video inputs sucks. Most "legacy" (read: older) equipment come with SCART connectors. Cheap SCART versions, I mean.
Composite? - Yes.
S-video? - Yes!
Component? - 'Course not.
HDMI? - Wha' you say?
My set top box is no exception. You just can't force me using composite video on a €10.000 HT system! Who's fault is it? UPC (my cable co)'s? Marantz's? Pace (STB)'s? I don't care, it just sucks having to use composite on a Philips Aurea TV! Did I already mention it sucked? My frustration put aside, it's a temporary problem anyway.
Network, USB and iPod functionality
This is an important feature why I wanted to upgrade: The new network functionalities. My first impressions are very good. I plugged in a network cable and within seconds the unit set up itself. I checked out Internet Radio and it found 650-something stations! I was very happy that the unit seems to select channels based on location. In my case the Netherlands. So all those Dutch stations you want are there, along with loads of foreign ones as well. BCC, the Germans, French stations, you name it, really.
The sound quality of the stations are disappointing. 128KB/sec, 192KB/sec. The best ones compare with a FM station, I suppose. Pitch, EQ and compression nonsense included! FM stations here in the Netherlands have a tendency to pitch up songs, boost bass frequencies and compress life out already overly compressed songs. Let's hope bit rates increase as time goes by.
The OSD is awesome. I've read a few opinions here and there about how it looks like a OSD from the 70's. But I'm ok with it. It's clean, responsive and pretty well designed (Yes, I know my interface design. I'm a professional multimedia engineer). I do get confused at the menu's top level. I exited the menu a thousand times already, because there's no visual feedback of the menu level I'm in.
I did find connecting to last.fm illogical. When manually changing the input on the unit to NET/USB and then selecting Last.FM, it won't connect. But, when using "source sel" on the remote and then selecting Last.FM, it does connect just fine. Strange huh?
My Last.FM subscription just increased in value. Recently, the initial hype I had with Last.FM died down and I started thinking wether or not I would continue my subscription. The AV7005, however, has a pretty cool Last.FM interface. Friend's radio channels, Artist channels, all easily selectable via the OSD interface. Skipping songs, "loving" and "banning" them is a breeze. Personally, I like it a lot more than the Last.FM app on my Macbook. I just don't quite understand it for some reason. Bottom line: with the OSD interface I get the most out of my subscription.
I tried connecting a FAT16 formatted external HD and it failed. The HD produced a few weird noises and the unit simply displayed "Connecting. Please standby" - or something like that. I ended up unplugging the HD and giving up.
iPod connection was a breeze though! Plugged it in, and a second later it was selectable in the NET/USB menu. But, I had to restart the unit first (shut down, switch on) to make it stop "Connecting. Please standby"). I guess it really didn't like the external HD a lot. The new iPhone 4 isn't listed in the manual as supported device. But I can tell you guys it works flawlessly. Again, I really dig the OSD interface. They could have made the album art graphic a little bit bigger, though.
If this is a taste of how Airplay is going to work, count me in!! I hope this finally solves my iTunes dilemma! I hate sitting with a laptop on the couch, operating iTunes. Apple's Front row lacks speed and functionality (mostly it's just not very intuitive for some reason). The remote app on the iPhone is nice, but scrolling hundreds of songs can be a *****!
With the OSD interface it's possible to go "up & down" complete pages. There are 7 songs listed per screen. So you don't have to scroll through them all one at a time. This beats the crap out of Frontrow's solution that "glides". I "overslide" the song I'm looking for EVERY single time. Response of the unit could be quicker, though. It's not bad. But you do get that nagging "overshooting" when you press NEXT NEXT NEXT NEXT too quickly.
When browsing playlists, there's also another search option available. Press "search" one time for "page up & down", twice for an alphanumerical bar that appears on top of the playlist's songs.This functionality is neat! You can quickly go from A to Z, selecting the letter of choice. What I don't get is the notice "Unsorted list...." when I select a letter. So basically, this functionality doesn't work for me. And where the hell is the "currently playing" option? I have to wait a few seconds for it to display the current song after browsing. here should be a "return" button or something.
So, first impression: very cool and well designed. But it could use a little bit of usability tweaking.
FM Radio
I love that automatic search and store option. It searches the entire FM band and stores all the stations. Marantz's new Preset Channel "memory bank"? - not so good. Presets are stored in 8 "memory banks" A to G, containing 8 slots each. Thus giving 64 memory slots. What's this? A moonrocket? Browsing them is somewhat confusing using the OSD. Why not just "slot #40" instead of "G3" or "A5"? I don't get it. The unit's display itself is very fast displaying RDS station name info. But the OSD does not display RDS station name info at all. Bummer. You see, you have to manually name a memory slot for easy reference. But that is gonna take some time. It would have been cool if the unit would automatically name the OSD memory slots based on RDS information.
Sound quality
Yes please, loads.
"Look mum! I can store the power of an entire solar flare eruption with these two capacitors!"
The AV7005 / MM7055 are impressive and "cool"! No, really. The SR7005 usually broke up in a sweat (meaning it got warm, not hot, but it did get warm). I haven't really pushed the MM7055 yet, but so far it just won't warm up. There are two capacitors clearly visible from the top. The MM7055 manual lists 2 (!!!) 33.000UF / 71volt capacitors. Wow! The power supply takes up a big portion of its guts as well. So people who wonder if the AV7005/MM7055 is worth it over the SR7005? I say YES! You can't beat having two HUGE power supplies (the AV7005's is very impressive as well) instead of "just" one. I haven't found the storage capacity of the SR7005, but I doubt it's 66.000 UF!
I played Seal's "Silence" right after set up. I love it! The new speakers help as well, of course. The sound is much more defined. Sharper, crispier, cleaner: I know a lot exotic metaphors.
. On the bass end, "I don't wanna know" by Mario Winans is evenly impressively sounding.
Just looking at the two units screams sound quality. I know, I'm biased. I think I fell in love with an amplifier. That could be illegal, couldn't it?
Sorry for the unscharp image, but I have to share those blue leds. TOO COOL!