It definitely does get confusing. Thank you for making it clearer.
Jeff R:
I was basically saying the 805 was out because you will not be able to utilize all the features on it. As far as the Amplifier section and running a pair of speakers in stereo it will be a very solid performer, especially the Pure Audio mode, like mentioned previously the 805 will likely outpower the the 2 channel HK and the 2 channel Onkyo. I was basically steering you away from a very large heavy reciever that most of the features you are looking for will not be used. (Save $$$) However I am sure you can find a used on out there on EBay or Audiogon for a price in the $400 range.
The AVR7000 weighed 50 lbs so neither the weight nor cost of the 805 is scary.

I actually have a bigger budget than I thought I'd need (up to $1500).
PENG:
I said
I assume you mean without attempting the bridging options you explained in your post #28 (not that I'm adventuresome enough to even try such a thing).
You replied:
Please make no such assumption. I listed 3 options, only one involved bridging.
Typo - sorry. I meant "without attempting the bridging
option" (singular), which you said would nearly double the 805's rated output power (making it substantially more powerful than the 3490). This still conflicts with your later post about not finding any 5.1 which offers the 2 channel driven output power comparable to that of the HK3490. So that still confuses me (sorry to be dumb) ... but I'd like to move past it in any event.
I don't know why you would want to replace the AVR7000 in the first place. It is a very powerful AVR. If your speakers and your room acoustic condition do not need that kind of power then a 3490 or the Marantz 6003 will do the trick for you. If you do need that kind of power than you have to get something as powerful as the AVR7000 and you just can't get such powerful AVR on a low end budget that you mentioned in your first post.
I don't WANT to replace it PENG ... it died. It's 10 years old and they want $500 to fix it with a 30-day guarantee that it'll stay fixed. To me, that's a waste of money, no matter how much I loved it. And when I originally stated I had a "lower-end budget," I was thinking more in terms of, like, not over $2000 (which in some forums will get you laughed at ... audio-snobbishness being what it can be). I clarified later, (in post #13), in response to m_vanmeter, my budget is around $1500 ... but lower than that would be welcome, particularly if I have to buy more speakers (sore subject).
My room is 18'x20'. The entertainment center is placed against a 20' foot wall. I have a hardwood floor with a low-plush 12'x15' area rug. One adjacent wall (18') has an 8' floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace) surrounded by built-ins, the wall across from the entertainment center has a 12' window (fully draped as needed). The other adjacent 18' "wall" is mostly open with a pass-through counter to the kitchen and a 8' (open) walk-through. the original ceiling was 7 1/2' with 4" exposed beams. I have "dropped" acoustic tiles 1" down between the beams.
I have JBL S312IIs placed on either side of the entertainment center, angled slightly toward the center of the opposite wall. They are 8ohm, 3-way speakers with a 1" titanium tweeter, a 4" midrange and a 12" woofer, rated at 94 dB and 250 watts. (These speakers alone make me a little uneasy about going with the Onkyo TX-8555 as Pearlcorder's Polk R20s are probably a tad easier to please.)
So, can we discuss the 805 then? Reports/reviews note the following:
- Audio latency (lip-synch issues)
- Audio switching delays (2-4 seconds)
- Running hot
- Lousy customer service
Of the two audio issues, the latency would probably bug me. Any feedback on whether this is accurate? Or maybe there's been a firmware update to correct it?
The heat issues are fairly common with Onkyo (and probably other "serious" AVRs). The HK I had ran quite warm, but not fry-an-egg-on-it "hot." The 850 is 17 1/8" x 18 1/16" x 7 5/8". I have a 20" x 20" x 12" (open front/back but closed sides) dedicated spot for it. The back has about a 4" clearance to the wall. Would this be open enough for it to breathe sufficiently or would I have to incorporate some cooling fans?
As for the customer service ... yeah. Let's just hope I don't need it since there's naught can be done about it.
Also, the 805 offers bi-amping. This sounds like it would be for my stereo set-up (but I'm not familiar with it) but I don't see that it offers Dolby Virtual Speaker (to simulate surround) when using it in stereo.
Thank you again for continuing to help me.