Should I get used receiver or used integrated amp (budget of $200)?

C

crtaudioguy

Audiophyte
I have a pair of Pioneer SP-BS21 (sensitivity of 84dB) speakers that I was using as desktop speakers, connected to an older Marantz receiver (105W per channel) in a 10' x 20' room. The receiver stopped working and I'm looking for a replacement. I would continue to be using these Pioneer speakers at my desk for music listening (no higher than 80dB on average) and also occasionally using these speakers for movie watching in the same room at moderate listening levels from 7 ft away. I have $200 to spend on a replacement receiver or amplifier. I only care about 2 channel listening. I'm looking at some receivers from the mid 2000s that were high end from Denon, Panasonic and Marantz that output 100 to 120W per channel at 8ohms. I know I don't need a receiver for 2 channel listening but the receivers I'm looking at provide a lot of power for cheap. I'm also seriously considering a used integrated amplifier but many of the ones I look at on Ebay that are working are over $200 and they are lower wattage (40W or under). My concern with an integrated amp is, would the integrated amp that I could afford have enough dynamic power for me to watch music and movies at moderate listening levels? How many watts do I really need for near field listening with decent headroom? If so, which integrated amp models would you recommend within my budget? I know I could get a small class D amp but I prefer to have everything integrated into one unit.
 
-Jim-

-Jim-

Audioholic General
Welcome to the Forum.

I'm not totally adverse to folks buying used gear, but for just a few bucks more I suggest you look at:

Denon AVR-S570BT 5.2-Ch x 70 Watts 8k A/V Receiver w/Bluetooth at $219 with Free Delivery and a 1 Year Denon Warranty on a Factory Refurbished unit. But if you could scrape together just a few more $, check out Denon AVR-S660H 5.2-Ch x 75 Watts 8K A/V Receiver again with Free Delivery and a 1 Year Denon Warranty on a Factory Refurbished unit.

Try this Speaker SPL Calculator but either one should be loud enough for your purposes. Later, add a Sub if you want a better experience.

I hope this is helpful.
 
Last edited:
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Would depend on the deal, but I did score a very nice older Denon avr some years back for $200, and in 2ch it has quite good power (tested at 185wpc 2ch driven at .1% thd into 8 ohm, 240 or so at 4 ohm IIRC). It would take a fairly expensive integrated amp to have that power level. I like the options for bass management avrs have but few integrated amps do as well. With used gear I prefer to buy local altho that avr I got from a fellow Audioholics member via the classifieds here, but if you have a decent sized metro area I'd think you should get some good used choices. I think covid drove prices up on used gear for a while, but seems they've relaxed again.
 
j_garcia

j_garcia

Audioholic Jedi
You mentioned movies, so that almost certainly means AVR not Integrated, even if you don't hook up the video to it. Having HDMI will simplify the connections and decoding since devices with stereo outputs are harder to come by these days.

I've bought receivers and even my current pre/pro from AC4L also, no issues with any of them for me.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Seriously, I have no life.
I have a pair of Pioneer SP-BS21 (sensitivity of 84dB) speakers that I was using as desktop speakers, connected to an older Marantz receiver (105W per channel) in a 10' x 20' room. The receiver stopped working and I'm looking for a replacement. I would continue to be using these Pioneer speakers at my desk for music listening (no higher than 80dB on average) and also occasionally using these speakers for movie watching in the same room at moderate listening levels from 7 ft away. I have $200 to spend on a replacement receiver or amplifier. I only care about 2 channel listening. I'm looking at some receivers from the mid 2000s that were high end from Denon, Panasonic and Marantz that output 100 to 120W per channel at 8ohms. I know I don't need a receiver for 2 channel listening but the receivers I'm looking at provide a lot of power for cheap. I'm also seriously considering a used integrated amplifier but many of the ones I look at on Ebay that are working are over $200 and they are lower wattage (40W or under). My concern with an integrated amp is, would the integrated amp that I could afford have enough dynamic power for me to watch music and movies at moderate listening levels? How many watts do I really need for near field listening with decent headroom? If so, which integrated amp models would you recommend within my budget? I know I could get a small class D amp but I prefer to have everything integrated into one unit.
Stay away from old AVRs, they don't age well.
 
H

head_unit

Junior Audioholic
How many watts do I really need for near field listening with decent headroom?I know I could get a small class D amp but I prefer to have everything integrated into one unit.
Very few watts. Even 10 would blow your ears off with any regular speakers. "84 dB" if that's even accurate...still quite loud with 10 watts.

What do you mean by "everything"? What inputs/features do you need that a small class D does not do?
 
P

PENG

Audioholic Slumlord
I have a pair of Pioneer SP-BS21 (sensitivity of 84dB) speakers that I was using as desktop speakers, connected to an older Marantz receiver (105W per channel) in a 10' x 20' room. The receiver stopped working and I'm looking for a replacement. I would continue to be using these Pioneer speakers at my desk for music listening (no higher than 80dB on average) and also occasionally using these speakers for movie watching in the same room at moderate listening levels from 7 ft away. I have $200 to spend on a replacement receiver or amplifier. I only care about 2 channel listening. I'm looking at some receivers from the mid 2000s that were high end from Denon, Panasonic and Marantz that output 100 to 120W per channel at 8ohms. I know I don't need a receiver for 2 channel listening but the receivers I'm looking at provide a lot of power for cheap. I'm also seriously considering a used integrated amplifier but many of the ones I look at on Ebay that are working are over $200 and they are lower wattage (40W or under). My concern with an integrated amp is, would the integrated amp that I could afford have enough dynamic power for me to watch music and movies at moderate listening levels? How many watts do I really need for near field listening with decent headroom? If so, which integrated amp models would you recommend within my budget? I know I could get a small class D amp but I prefer to have everything integrated into one unit.
I would recommend something like this, $100 over your budget but you can try making an offer for $200-$250:

Denon AVR-4310CI 7.1 Channel AV Network Stereo Receiver Dolby DTS TESTED READ | eBay

You are right about integrate amps at such price range won't likely give you the output into 4 ohms you are looking for.

Here's the Denon's tested output figures, no integrated amps at even $2,000 today can touch such performance. I have a much older AVR-3805 that is 20 years old and is still working like it was on day 1. You may be able to find one, or the newer 3808 that has HDMI for less than $200, those were build like tanks.

Denon AVR-4310CI PLIIz Networking A/V Receiver Review

# of CHTest TypePowerLoadTHD + N
1CFP-BW163 watts8 ohms< 0.1%
1CFP-BW267 watts4 ohms< 0.1%
11kHz Psweep173 watts8 ohms< 0.1%
11kHz Psweep276 watts4 ohms< 0.1%
21kHz PSweep152 watts4 ohms< 0.1%
71kHz PSweep95 watts8 ohms< 0.1%
71kHz CEA-2006130 watts8 ohms< 0.1%
11kHz CEA-2006192 watts8 ohms< 0.1%
11kHz CEA-2006321 watts4 ohms< 0.1%
 

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