Hello!
My fiance and I have a Yamaha RX-V663 reciever that is capable of 7.1 surround sound. But when we bought it, we were in a tiny apartment and the salesman said that there weren't many things that offered 7.1 surround sound so we didn't need to get those extra two speakers.
Well now we have bought a house and our family room is much bigger and better shaped for a surround sound system. We've also noticed that many of the Blu-Ray movies we've watched and will watch have TrueHD audio tracks that are in 7.1.
So we're wondering, if we only have the 5 speakers, what's happening to those other channels of audio? Is there audio that we are losing because we're missing two speakers? What happens if we get two more speakers and then we watch a movie that's only in 5.1, will those extra speakers buzz or throw off the surround? What if the audio is just stereo? Is 7.1 sound noticeable or worth it?
Any advice is greatly appreciated! Thank you!!
IMO, if you have significant space behind you, 7.1 is well worth it, even if just as matrixed 5.1 tracks.
Either way, you don't lose any info, or gain any extra info, whichever track you use, for whichever setup you use.
Its sorta like scaling for a tv. We don't use separate displays for 480, 720, 1080. We have it scaled for our display. Matrixing is sorta like that for a 7.1 track.
The biggest benefit is, well, surround wrap. Stable imaging, as one set of surrounds do not need to try and straddle the side and rear areas.
The one piece of differing advice I usually give between 5.1 or 7.1 is placement. If 5.1, you will want a somewhat obtuse angle so that the surround is straddling side + rear areas. Something like 110 degrees that is often recommended.
Once you go 7.1, try to put the sides at 90 degrees, and the rears behind you. There are also different suggestions as far as spacing between rears. I believe THX Ultra setting would recommend within 4 ft of each other, but I would prefer the best stereo imaging you can get from rears.
So, one way to figure that out is to temporarily hook up main channels to the rears, and feed some stereo music. When you get the best rear imaging, I think you found your spots.
Personally, if I had to choose, Id take 7.1 lossy over 5.1 lossless for my HT viewing.
Music could be different.