This doesn't make me feel that great about the purchase; here, Anamorphic is telling me that the TX-8555 is a great unit and you're calling it a "Best Buy Special"...furthermore, I must say that I disagree regarding the "cheapness" of this receiver The model I purchased is actually the better of Onkyo's stereo receiver pair offerings (there's a cheaper 50 watt per channel model that REALLY looked less expensive) and if you read reviews and owner comments on this model, it has gotten absolutely wonderful feedback about its power, build quality, upscale feel of its controls, etc.
Don't worry about it, your Onkyo will be OK for a secondary system. I was mainly referring to it's dated looks, as I remember seeing similar units from Onkyo when I first started looking at receivers, around 15 years ago, They haven't changed much, and indeed were available at BB at the time. I've owned such receivers before, none of them ever gave me the overall satisfaction of a good integrated or separates system. The likes of which was usually not available at BB.
My first real receiver was a Kenwood 5.1 channel dolby pro-logic (before dolby digital came out), which I thought was great at the time, until I got my big Carver amp/pre-amp along with my Sony ES CD player. Besides being MUCH nicer looking and obviously better built, there was a notable improvement in SQ (or some would have me believe I and my non-audiophile friends THOUGHT there was an improvement). Since then, I never wanted to go back to a receiver for music, especially a multi-channel one.
Perhaps receiver technology has changed? My Marantz SR-4023 I recently bought (reluctantly on a budget) is actually pretty damn nice, without the cluttered, plasticy looks and the myriad of square buttons on receivers I've had before, It sounds great, and has most of the features (except HD radio) I could ever want in a 2-channel receiver.
Still, I hope to upgrade to the better Marantz Integrated/Tuner combo in the future, or possibly use the SR-4023 as a nice pre-amp/tuner with some big beefy power amp.
Also, according to the one who recommended you the Onyko, they all sound the same, and 50 watts vs. 100 watts offers little advantage... if you follow that. Might as well have got the cheapest Onkyo unit and put the rest of your funds to that TT or speakers.
but that said, the A-9555 was indeed a BEAUTIFUL looking piece of gear; I just could not afford it right now realistically, and that's what it comes down to for most of us. I want a Bentley coupe...I simply can't have one.
Comparing the A-9555 to a Bentley Coupe is stretching things a little bit don't you think? The A-9555 is an absolute bargain for what you get compared to other higher priced niche integrated amps.
Sorry to say, but most enthusiasts would consider this Mid-Fi or even budget unit territory here.
What exactly are you reffering to here...the receiver? The integrated amp?
The A-9555 of course, I thought that was obvious.
Yeah, that's not a make or break feature for me, at all, but the receiver I bought does have pre-outs as well.
What your receiver has wasn't the point. The point was you could still hook a subwoofer up to that integrated, although not as easily. It seems this is the main reason for recommending against an integrated.
I don't need a tuner, but I simply could not afford the integrated right now.
OK, I understand. I'm in a similar situation myself. But your initial inquires and opening statements seemed to indicate a much greater ambition and budget for a secondary 2-channel system. What happened? A sobering talk by the wife? Your options have steadily gotten worse over the course of this whole thing and now your in ultra-budget territory, with only one unit in the bag.
I see now it looks like you aren't even going to get a TT at all, at least not for awhile. My God Man! You didn't need any help from anyone here, just buy a decent black box stereo receiver from one of the usual suspects and be done with it! They are all very similar.
Better yet, I wouldn't bother with a second system at all at this point. Save the money until you can get the better stuff, or use it to upgrade your current #1 system, such as better speakers. You can reserve the replaced, lesser speakers for the #2 system.
I'm not trying to give you a hard time, just wanting to help you from wasting money on something that may be less then satisfactory, as I have done many times.
There are two kinds of bum steer advice you can get. One is from the fanatical audiophile who will have you mortgage your house for some 15 watt tube amps, cables, and nonsensical accessories, the other on the opposite extreme will tell you that nothing matters except for speakers, and to go buy an Acme/Apex CD player/receiver and $20,000 speakers.
I've received and followed both kinds of advice, with ruinous consequences. But I've found that as with many things in life, the truth runs somewhere in the middle, and units like the Technics SL-1200, the Onkyo A-9555 and others of similar quality by Denon, Marantz, etc., offers some of that "middle truth" satisfaction at somewhat reasonable prices.
I will get back to your PM as soon as I can. Thanks.
Sure, love to hear from you. But if your not getting a TT right now, there is really no reason.