As a sufferer of audio equipment upgradeitus I’ve noticed, as I’ve been reading reviews on AVR’s (Amazon/audio message boards), the persistent claims of HDMI board failures on various name brand AVR’s (Onkyo/Pioneer/Denon/Yamaha, etc.). Is there something in the HDMI protocol, voltage current handling or cheap/shoddy manufacturing that makes them more prone to failure? Or is the HDMI cable itself that’s causing these failures, depending on the HDMI revisions (incompatibility with the AVR HDMI board) or current handling that’s the issue? And which brands are more prone than others?
About 10 months ago I reconfigured my audio cable connections when I purchased a Oppo BDP-105, to take advantage of the Oppo’s 5.1 audio out to the Yamaha’s pre-out’s in the LR and decided to run the YPAO for the first time. So I hooked up a HDMI cable to my Yamaha RX-V4600 HDMI out and it failed. I contacted Yamaha tech support and after troubleshooting the issue, the tech informed me that more than likely I had a HDMI board failure. Since I purchased the unit new in 2005 my warranty had run out. I’m more than happy with the sound for both HT & 2.1 (using the straight analog function) but it would have been nice to hear if it would have made a difference. Knock on wood my other 2 Yamaha’s (2600 & 2700) have no such issue.
Is this more of an age issue and modern AVR’s have resolved it somewhat? I realize that circuit board failures will occur, especially with the inconsistent power from your local power provider and there are dips/spikes in current transmission, especially during the summer when the grid is taxed. I understand that a lemon or two will escape the factory, no matter what the quality control is but I can’t help but notice complaints, even on current models, from customers.
Thanks guys & gals