Well I finally got my Arcam AVR-350 and promised feedback...
I won't go into a lengthy review of unpacking and hook up, other than I purchased a black unit and it looks great and is solidly built.
After reading review after review over the last 2+ years on this unit, I was really wondering if it could as good as everyone has been saying.
The answer....
It is!!! It is nothing short of spectacular.
Fortunately, I had a couple of receivers to compare this to, as I own a Rotel RSX-1056 and I recently demoed the new Yamaha V-3900 for 30 days. I had both of these receivers hooked up to my Emotiva XPA-2 Amp driving my 2 front speakers, so all receivers were powering just my Center and Rear speakers.
First off 2 channel stereo is fantastic. Either in stereo mode, or when in Direct mode, which switches over to Analog connections and shuts down the internal circuitry of the unit, the sound is very clear, pure, and the soundfield is very wide and deep. The speakers literally disappear in my room and the instruments are layered in a 3 dimensional field.
Male and Female vocals are locked in the center of the room, with instruments laid out to where they would be if you were listening to a performance live. So far I've listened to my Pink Floyd, James Taylor, Diana Krall, Sade, and Norah Jones CD's. I found myself wanting to listen to songs I typically would fast forward through, as I would appreciate the detail of guitars, drums or other instruments in the particular CD I was listening to..
Next, I've watched scenes from 6 different movies I own.
Spiderman Blu-Ray
Iron Man Blu-Ray
Dark Knight Blu-Ray
Star Wars Episode IV standard DVD
Gladiator standard DVD
300 from my DishNetwork DVR
The first thing I noticed with the movies is the clarity of the voices coming from my center channel. The voices seem more life like and far less hollow. Voices with the Yamaha and the Rotel at times seemed to echo a little and lack warmth. Now the dialogue is amazingly clear and precise. Every word is clearly heard and defined. The other thing I noticed is that when there is a pause in speech or noise, the sound is completely dead. In other words, the separation between dialogue and no sound is so great, that it brings further detail to the dialogue when it is produced.. I really don't know how to explain this in words, other than it is not something I've experienced before with the other AVR's. I guess it is like comparing black levels on a TV. The better the black level, the great the contrast and picture..
The same thing holds true for the main speakers. The sound is very precise and clear. It also envelopes my room much better. Before, sound would pan from left to right, or right to left, but it didn't seem to be as continuous, as enveloping, as deep. There are layers of sound now in the front soundstage that didn't exist like before. The Yamaha played loud, but it seemed to be a kind of "in your face" presentation. The Rotel was a little more refined and created a little more of a leveled sound field. The Arcam is in a different category. It is more refined, more precise and more encompassing.
The other thing I noticed is the rear speakers. They are far more involved in my movies than they were with the Yamaha or Rotel. I now get sound effects that seem to be 3 dimensional from my rears.
To give you an idea how good the surround mode is, and I know this will come under strict criticism by some, but listening to Blu-Rays in DD through bitstream ( a Coax ) connection sounds better than the Yamaha did listening to DD HD through HDMI.
The Yamaha lacked refinement in its presentation. It was loud, had a ton of effects, but it lacked the 3 dimensional sound field that the Arcam gives. I can honestly say that if I only watched movies in DD bitstream and didn't try to listen to DD HD, I wouldn't miss anything.
I do intend on hooking up a good Blu-Ray to the multichannel inputs, but right now, I have a 300 series Sony that lacks the ability to calibrate my speakers and offers no bass management. The bitstream audio through DD bitstream sounds better right now. That may change when I get a better Blu-Ray player.
In all, I am very, very impressed with this unit. For the price, I can't think of a better AVR for sound quality. You can pick up an Arcam AVR-350 for $1300-$1600 right now either open boxed, or slightly pre-owned. I was fortunate enough to find a referbed unit from Arcam with a full Warranty for $1300...
If you want to just buy an AVR and not an external Amp like I'm doing, the Arcam has more than enough juice. It has 7 channels of continuous, not peak like most of the Japanese receivers, at 100 watts per channel. When running in Stereo, that figure jumps to 120 Watts/channel. You can also bi-amp the front speakers with the extra 2 amps if you are running a 5.1 set up. I probably would have been fine doing this, but since I already have my Emotiva Amp and I have very power hungry speakers, I'll just continue using the Arcam for my Center and Rears.
I'm excited about many years of blissful audio listening. This unit is awesome..