Concerns for the Future of Sound United and Update on my Marantz 7706.

TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Maybe @M Code has some insight.
I hope he might have good news. However, from what I have read it looks pessimistic. I would not like them to disappear, which they won't entirely. However that will be the worst outcome as you will see the brand names sold, so that they would become junk brands.
 
Trell

Trell

Audioholic Spartan
My 2015 model Denon AVR-X4200W is in daily use with 4 Ohm speakers in a 5.1 setup (two subwoofers) and is till working.
 
Trell

Trell

Audioholic Spartan
A purchase of a billion compared to a relatively small shortfall means just write it off and shut it down because someone doesn't step up immediately? Eh?
I don't think so either, but can I replace my old AVR if it breaks down.

Edit: Grammar :rolleyes:
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
I hope he might have good news.

I just don’t see Denon AVR going extinct. Maybe expensive AVP and expensive powered speakers will go extinct because most people can’t afford them. But I just can’t see $600-$1200 Denon AVR going extinct.

Again, Sound United will likely do exactly what Yamaha has been doing the past 5 years - don’t make any more new AVPs and newer model AVR - weather the economic storm. Sony has done this also. Just continue AVR in the $500-$3000 range.

No more AVP’s and external amps.

SU has stopped producing the Polk Legacy speakers since about 2 years ago. So they will just continue to “downgrade” and weather the storm until someone buys.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
I just don’t see Denon AVR going extinct. Maybe expensive AVP and expensive powered speakers will go extinct because most people can’t afford them. But I just can’t see $600-$1200 Denon AVR going extinct.

Again, Sound United will likely do exactly what Yamaha has been doing the past 5 years - don’t make any more new AVPs and newer model AVR - weather the economic storm. Sony has done this also. Just continue AVR in the $500-$3000 range.

No more AVP’s and external amps.
That may all be true. But who will be the holding company? These outfits can't exist in isolation, and the board of Masimo are quite clear they want nothing more to do with them.

The bigger issue for all is this: - I talk to friends and acquaintances and there is an overriding issue. They don't want what is on offer. The fundamental problem is that the higher end of the industry has lost touch with domestic architecture and therefore a viable customer base. What is definitely required is far more two channel AV gear with a smaller footprint and much better aesthetics. There is an absolute dearth of good two channel gear at affordable prices. That is what is driving the death of the goose.
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
That may all be true. But who will be the holding company? These outfits can't exist in isolation, and the board of Masimo are quite clear they want nothing more to do with them.

The bigger issue for all is this: - I talk to friends and acquaintances and there is an overriding issue. They don't want what is on offer. The fundamental problem is that the higher end of the industry has lost touch with domestic architecture and therefore a viable customer base. What is definitely required is far more two channel AV gear with a smaller footprint and much better aesthetics. There is an absolute dearth of good two channel gear at affordable prices. That is what is driving the death of the goose.
You think the cause of the problem is the lack of 2CH systems and too many AVR? :D

Perhaps the lack of active systems like that $23K active speaker on the other thread? :D

The problem is the poor economy right now.

90% of the market is AVR, not 2CH and high-end AVP and amps. So financially it makes more sense to just stick to that 90% market and keep things more “simple”.

I think the awesome state of the art Marantz AV-10, AMP-10, and all their high-end products are the “problem” financially.

And B&W speakers that cost $50K is the problem.
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
If we’re making predictions now, here’s my prediction:

Until they sell, SU will cut production and follow Yamaha’s footsteps.

It makes a lot more sense than just giving up and die. :D
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
If we’re making predictions now, here’s my prediction:

Until they sell, SU will cut production and follow Yamaha’s footsteps.

It makes a lot more sense than just giving up and die. :D
It is not just Denon and Marantz. They own far too many speaker companies. The whole outfit is a massive spiraling out of control mess.

These outfits are all selling to the same limited market. I know many think their only option is a sound bar. They know they are not much good and not really what they want.

There needs to be decent two and may be three channel systems out there priced within reach of the many.

These outfits are all competing for the same limited market. There is a huge market out there between multichannel systems and sound bars. This is the problem of the modern age, everyone goes bonkers at the same time and the same way, and that is not limited to audio and AV.
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
There is a huge market out there between multichannel systems and sound bars.
Huge market? If 90% of the market is AVR, how can there be a “HUGE” market for 2CH and 3CH components?

The other 10% that is not AVR includes 2CH and AVP/amp. And you somehow think that the majority of this 10% is for 2CH and 3CH systems?
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Huge market? If 90% of the market is AVR, how can there be a “HUGE” market for 2CH and 3CH components?

The other 10% that is not AVR includes 2CH and AVP/amp. And you somehow think that the majority of this 10% is for 2CH and 3CH systems?
What you don't understand is that it is "death loop." By that I mean they are only catering to a market they essentially created and in the scheme of things it is small. So your 10% is 10% of the existing market and NOT the potential market. The whole market has become geared way out of whack and a long way from practical reality.
Face it modern home architecture and interior design is in no way geared to multichannel audio. Two channel fits in far better with current aesthetic design and has done actually since the sixties and seventies. There has been obstinate avoidance of that reality.
 
Trell

Trell

Audioholic Spartan
What you don't understand is that it is "death loop." By that I mean they are only catering to a market they essentially created and in the scheme of things it is small. So your 10% is 10% of the existing market and NOT the potential market. The whole market has become geared way out of whack and a long way from practical reality.
Face it modern home architecture and interior design is in no way geared to multichannel audio. Two channel fits in far better with current aesthetic design and has done actually since the sixties and seventies. There has been obstinate avoidance of that reality.
The market has always been very small for anything more than stereo and perhaps a small "subwoofer".
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
The market has always been very small for anything more than stereo and perhaps a small "subwoofer".
That is precisely my point. However that market has been wilfully neglected.

A good 2 channel system gives you at least 90% of the loaf. The industry has concentrated on that last 10%.

The other issue is that the AV multi channel AV market is now maturing as you would expect from the experience of other new technologies. This home AV market started and diverged from classic stereo audio in the dying years of the last century. So this technology is now approaching 30 years of age. This is widely recognized as the maturing period of new technologies and this is happening now.

Yes, Yamaha have spotted this and are not churning out new units, which is wise.
 

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