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What is important to you?
- Features
- Sound Quality
- Ease of Use
- Reliability
- Connectivity
- Build Quality
- Power
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1. Reliability is the most important. If it does not work, it doesn't sound good and isn't easy to use. It is useless if it does not work. I buy receivers to give me pleasure, not to irritate me and waste my money on junk.
2. Sound quality matters next in importance. However, any decently made receiver will sound pretty much the same as any other one, when they are set up the same and exclusive proprietary signal processing is shut off. And since I normally don't use too much extra signal processing, this isn't going to be a factor in selecting a receiver. In other words, practically speaking, this is the last thing to worry about. It is
theoretically second, but
practically last.
3. Connectivity matters quite a bit, as otherwise, one cannot hook up all of one's gear to it. However, I have no excessive needs on this end of things, so nearly any mid-level receiver will be fine for this. I prefer something that can hook up some legacy items, but at the moment, I am using 1 composite video connection and the rest HDMI for my main home theater. For my second "home theater" (which is just 2.0), I am using S-video and composite only.
4. Features are important, and are mostly what one gets as one goes up in price (along with connectivity). However, a mid-level unit is good enough for features for me.
5. Ease of use matters, but for most things, I am not going to be adjusting them every day, so this, again, is not going to be hard to be satisfactory.
6. Build quality matters some, but I really don't want to pay for more than is actually useful.
7. Power is almost unimportant. Usually, either one will be able to drive one's speakers with just about anything, or one will want to buy separate ąmplification anyway.
Certainly, for the price increases in receivers, one gets little power for one's money as one goes up the model lines. In my case, with my current speakers (which I do not intend to ever upgrade), just about anything will drive them satisfactorily, so this isn't going to be an issue for me.
Basically, the way I select a unit is to buy one that is from a reliable brand, that has the connectivity and features I need. Last time I bought a discontinued model for much less than the normal price, so I have a higher model than ever, but I doubt that I will go with such a high unit next time. I only want to spend more money if I get something actually useful for it; I don't need bragging rights about having a high end unit that sounds the same as a middle unit. And I don't want to pay extra for features that I am not going to use, or for more power than I need (which, again, if more power is needed, it is usually better to go with a separate ąmplifier anyway, so I am not going to be buying a higher model receiver for power).
The practical upshot of this is, if I were looking for a new receiver, I would probably be looking at something like the bottom of Yamaha's Aventage line. But I am happy with my old RX-V2700, which does everything I currently need it to do. When it dies, or I decide I need something it can't do, then I will buy another receiver to replace it, and not before that (unless I find a deal that is just too good to pass up
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, but it would have to be an incredible deal, as I don't need it).