Hello everyone,
I'm looking to get some advice on what gear to purchase for my system. I have a 2.2 channel system that I use for Movies, TV, and Gaming.
I'm giving my AVR to a friend (Denon AVR-S950H) and looking to replace it with something new.
I'm unsure if I should just get a new AVR or something like a WiiM Ultra & an Amp (Nord Hypex NC252MP).
My question: What are the benefits of the AVR? I don't really understand the whole AVR down-sampling multichannel content to 2.1.
Since my use-case is Movies, TV, and Gaming - would an AVR be the better choice?
I was considering the Denon x3800h on sale ($1000) - but a friend told me since I only have 2 speakers I would be better of with the WiiM Ultra and a good amp.
My Equipment:
Speakers: Arendal 1723 THX Monitors
Subs: HSU VTF-15H MK2
AVR: Denon S950h
Any advice would be greatly appreciated! Thank you!
It seems like an interesting unit. For your needs though it has one serious shortcoming. It only supports ARC and not eARC. ARC is often buggy and does not support a lossless connection. For that reason, I would not want it.
By the time you add the cost of a decent amp, you will be up to the cost of a receiver which is more versatile.
From the impedance curve your speakers are four ohm. Receivers tend not to like that if you push the volume hard. But they are nice speakers. Your optimal solution is an AVP and an external two channel power amp, or get a receiver with preouts to drive an external amp. I have a feeling those speakers would benefit from an amp that is very comfortable with four ohm loads.
Lastly, since you use your TV a lot, you might want to consider adding a center channel. Although having said that I have a 7.2.4 system and a 2.1 and 3.1 systems. On the 2.1 system I have to say that I don't really miss the center channel. On the 3.1 system there really is no significant difference if you use it 2.1 or 3.1. Dialog is fractionally more focused in in 3.1 but it is really splitting hairs. I suspect your speakers have good speech intelligibility in which case a center speaker will not bring much to the table. Far too many speakers have poor speech intelligibility and that also includes center channels.
I am astounded at how many speakers fall short of the mark, and have to wonder where their designers learned their craft.