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

TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Business as usual is the atmosphere with my SU contacts and other SU-dealers who have been selling B&W, Marantz, Denon, etc., all these months.

A lot of other SU products are made in Vietnam and China. I am not seeing complaints about their reliability.

Many of us have been saying the past few years that the AV7706 has performed “poorly” compared to other products like the Denon x3800 AVR, which is made in Vietnam. So perhaps this is just an isolated case specific to the AV7706 or maybe just your bad luck.
The major issue is service. When the 7705 failed after a little over five years, the first warranty service center was just plain unhelpful. The second one I spoke to, I had a long conversation with a very nice and helpful technician. He said that these units were in fact known for my problem and that parts availability was pretty much non existent and the boards I would need were NLA.

I then made the mistake of buying the 7706 which developed a very similar fault to the 7705 after three months. I sent it via my dealer with a nice covering letter and full contact information. I have heard nothing and nor has the dealer. Enquiries will be made after the holiday weekend as it is now past their stated 90 day window. That window itself is way long and not really acceptable for a three month old unit.

At the moment I have to advise members that purchases of Marantz products entail significant risk. The service they have provided me I regard as totally unacceptable.

So, I bought the AV 10 and hope it has long legs, but my choice was really only between the and Anthem. I think I made the better choice between the two. The AV 10 has had zero glitches and has performed perfectly and sounds a lot better then the 7705/7706.

The point is that the behavior I have experienced from Sound United, particularly Marantz has been outrageously bad and unacceptable. So I think any member has to be cautious about the purchase of any Marantz product currently.
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
The major issue is service.
Your case of repair service is lacking for sure. Have to agree. You’ve already mentioned this, but this is probably due to the lack of parts specific to the AV7706.

No point crying over spilled milk, but if you had asked us for our opinions months ago, we would’ve told you not to buy the AV7706. :D

We would have told you to get the AV10 or Denon/Marantz AVR that had much better measurements than the old AV7706. :D

If you wanted something made in Japan, it would be the Denon x4800, x6800 and up and Marantz Cinema 30 and 40.
 
Last edited:
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Your case of repair service is lacking for sure. Have to agree. You’ve already mentioned this, but this is probably due to the lack of parts specific to the AV7706.

No point crying over spilled milk, but if you had asked us for our opinions months ago, we would’ve told you not to buy the AV7706. :D

We would have told you to get the AV10 or Denon/Marantz AVR that had much better measurements than the old AV7706. :D

If you wanted something made in Japan, it would be the Denon x4800, x6800 and up and Marantz Cinema 30 and 40.
The problem is that I thought that it would be a good bet the 7706 would outlast me. I will be 79 in January so well past my LD50! However, I am very happy with the AV 10 and there will hopefully still be money left for my kids.

None of those models you mention could work in my system. The system was basically designed with Marantz AVPs in mind. There is no receiver in the world compatible with this system.
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
The problem is that I thought that it would be a good bet the 7706 would outlast me. I will be 79 in January so well past my LD50! However, I am very happy with the AV 10 and there will hopefully still be money left for my kids.

None of those models you mention could work in my system. The system was basically designed with Marantz AVPs in mind. There is no receiver in the world compatible with this system.
Why wouldn't a flagship avr have same options as your pre-pro? What are they particularly?
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Why wouldn't a flagship avr have same options as your pre-pro? What are they particularly?
It is absolutely essential that the pre pro have both RCA and XLR on all outputs, as many channels have both in use. There are 18 power amp channels to be driven, and the amps for the front three require both RCA and XLR on the same channels, to drive the pro crossovers. The rear backs require XLRs, to drive the crossovers as they are active speakers.
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
It is absolutely essential that the pre pro have both RCA and XLR on all outputs, as many channels have both in use. There are 18 power amp channels to be driven, and the amps for the front three require both RCA and XLR on the same channels, to drive the pro crossovers. The rear backs require XLRs, to drive the crossovers as they are active speakers.
So your crossovers and amps can't deal with rca?
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
So your crossovers and amps can't deal with rca?
Exactly, and if you did try to split the RCA outputs there would be inadequate voltage. This system is totally unlike any other members system on multiple levels. Power output is 3.2K watts total for a start, it has variable BSC which I came up with and JBL copied for a while. That is actually a major game changer and should be widely used, not just by me.

In addition the main speakers are dual TLs, as far as I know that was only done by the team that designed the legendary BBC Maida Vale BBC studio monitors and a very costly speaker that was designed by John Wright of TDL, right before his untimely death. I have not been able to find that any of those speakers survive.

The BBC monitors were designed by some of the most famous individuals in the history of audio. Four of the amp boards came my way and I have them put away as keepsakes. The designers were Peter Walker, Jim Rogers, Raymond Cooke and John Wright. These speakers are long dismantled as the BBC had to sell those studios to raise cash.
 
AcuDefTechGuy

AcuDefTechGuy

Audioholic Jedi
The problem is that I thought that it would be a good bet the 7706 would outlast me. I will be 79 in January so well past my LD50! However, I am very happy with the AV 10 and there will hopefully still be money left for my kids.

None of those models you mention could work in my system. The system was basically designed with Marantz AVPs in mind. There is no receiver in the world compatible with this system.
Well, you deserve the Marantz AV10.

I think many of us were just surprised you were sticking with the AV7706. But a higher power had other plans. ;)

So glad you finally got what you deserved.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Well, you deserve the Marantz AV10.

I think many of us were just surprised you were sticking with the AV7706. But a higher power had other plans. ;)

So glad you finally got what you deserved.
Not sure deserve it, but I am lucky enough to be able to afford it.

I know what I do deserve though, and that is a working AV 7706 or my money back. The worst feature of this whole saga, is Marantz not being able to repair a five year old receiver, and not repairing or communicating over the 7706 that failed at three months. That is what should concern members here, as that can not be considered in any way ethical business practice. It is far removed from it, and way wide of the mark.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Yeah since it’s under warranty, Masimo/SU need to either repair it or send you a replacement AV7706 or equivalent AVP.
Exactly. My dealer is going to rattle their cage this week, before he leaves with his wife for Venice.
He has offered to pay me for the unit, but I have refused to let him. I would rather take the hit than him, if the worst comes to the worst. I do think members need to take this sorry tale on board, when considering purchases. I have no idea if all Sound United divisions are the same, but Marantz clearly have problems.
 
D

dlaloum

Senior Audioholic
Exactly. My dealer is going to rattle their cage this week, before he leaves with his wife for Venice.
He has offered to pay me for the unit, but I have refused to let him. I would rather take the hit than him, if the worst comes to the worst. I do think members need to take this sorry tale on board, when considering purchases. I have no idea if all Sound United divisions are the same, but Marantz clearly have problems.
It isn't just SU... I have a similar issue with my Integra (Onkyo) DTR 70.4, where the DSP board failed (a known manufacturing fault) - but in between it being issued and failing in my home, the company changed ownership, and the local service agent could not get a replacement DSP board... it was around 5 years old.

The old Onkyo/Integra used to publish service manuals, the current organisation does not.

I have also not heard of any board replacements on the O/I AVR's - so far all the faults I have heard about have been resolved with a replacement unit.

It reminds me of the Motorola 6sigma analysis, where they worked out that simply replacing mobile phones was more economical for them than repairing....

We may have reached the stage where the marginal cost of repair is higher than a straight replacement (taking into account stocking costs, labour, etc...) - which effectively makes our AVR's (and AVP's) - disposable items.

I'm still holding onto my old DTR70.4 in the hope of at some stage repairing it, but right now it is a massive boat anchor.

Have D&M at least issued service manuals for the current generation gear?
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
It isn't just SU... I have a similar issue with my Integra (Onkyo) DTR 70.4, where the DSP board failed (a known manufacturing fault) - but in between it being issued and failing in my home, the company changed ownership, and the local service agent could not get a replacement DSP board... it was around 5 years old.

The old Onkyo/Integra used to publish service manuals, the current organisation does not.

I have also not heard of any board replacements on the O/I AVR's - so far all the faults I have heard about have been resolved with a replacement unit.

It reminds me of the Motorola 6sigma analysis, where they worked out that simply replacing mobile phones was more economical for them than repairing....

We may have reached the stage where the marginal cost of repair is higher than a straight replacement (taking into account stocking costs, labour, etc...) - which effectively makes our AVR's (and AVP's) - disposable items.

I'm still holding onto my old DTR70.4 in the hope of at some stage repairing it, but right now it is a massive boat anchor.

Have D&M at least issued service manuals for the current generation gear?
The answer is NO service manuals, and none have been released for years. Part of the problem is that it is usually not as simple as just changing a board, and there are issues like flashing the BIOS.

I had a Panasonic disc player have the disc drive fail a few years ago. A new drive was available from Panasonic and I bought one. I installed it, but the unit did not work or respond to commands even.

So, I complained bitterly to Panasonic when they still had someone to complain to. After a lot of wrangling a nice tech sent me to the codes, and then connected to the Internet the tech initialized the new drive, and it has worked since, I think. Our eldest grandson has it now.

So repair service is not like it used to be, by a long shot. And it seems to me there is a downright conspiracy to make repair impossible. Your observation that these costly units are in effect disposable is on the money. However that is a disgrace and totally unacceptable and will eventually kill this great hobby. It is part of the resurgence of analog only systems, and this will continue I fear.

What we have now is totally unacceptable on multiple levels, dishonest and above all unethical.
 
H

highfigh

Seriously, I have no life.
So repair service is not like it used to be, by a long shot. And it seems to me there is a downright conspiracy to make repair impossible. Your observation that these costly units are in effect disposable is on the money. However that is a disgrace and totally unacceptable and will eventually kill this great hobby. It is part of the resurgence of analog only systems, and this will continue I fear.

What we have now is totally unacceptable on multiple levels, dishonest and above all unethical.
Service of AV stopped being the same as in the past around 1995. They stopped holding online training after they ended in-person training WHERE SERVICE TECHS COULD NETWORK WITH OTHERS AND SHARE TIPS & TRICKS, which was extremely useful. They went to CD-based manuals and bulletins which made sense because they were shipping bulk paper, which is a waste of money. Then, they mandated that most (and eventually all) equipment be sent to regional service centers before defaulting to shipping refurbs as repacements.

If I buy new, I want a new piece unless they're willing to send a refund.

Ethics? We're dealing with MBAs counting beans, not normal people.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Service of AV stopped being the same as in the past around 1995. They stopped holding online training after they ended in-person training WHERE SERVICE TECHS COULD NETWORK WITH OTHERS AND SHARE TIPS & TRICKS, which was extremely useful. They went to CD-based manuals and bulletins which made sense because they were shipping bulk paper, which is a waste of money. Then, they mandated that most (and eventually all) equipment be sent to regional service centers before defaulting to shipping refurbs as repacements.

If I buy new, I want a new piece unless they're willing to send a refund.

Ethics? We're dealing with MBAs counting beans, not normal people.
Boy you hit all those nails squarely on the head!

Everything you say is true, and exactly the untenable situation we have, which will destroy the market.

I think we need a change in law, that in units over a certain dollar value, equipment needs to have a diagnostic port with codes open to all. We had this chaos with car electronics back in the late seventies and early eighties. It was an absolute nightmare. So Congress enacted the OBD-2 codes that had to be accessible to all. That was a huge gamechanger. Trouble is they forgot to make sure any future codes were accessible to all, and came up with those darn e-codes.
 
newsletter

  • RBHsound.com
  • BlueJeansCable.com
  • SVS Sound Subwoofers
  • Experience the Martin Logan Montis
Top