I've read the review on the new Cary Audio 11a and compared that to the Denon AVP-A1HDCI and AVR5308CI.
The brand new price is $4K vs $7.5K, but a refurbished Denon AVP-A1 from Dakmart (1 yr warranty) is around $3,900.
A refurbished Denon AVR5308 is $2700 right now @ eCost.
If you want to be "old school hard-core" and compare the measured specs (FR, Crosstalk, THD, SNR), the Denon AVP-A1 is the best, the Cary Audio 11a is 2nd, and the AVR5308 is 3rd.
But in real life, all three would be pretty much even to one another and they would be pretty much equal to the Marantz, Integra, & Anthem.
I think Cary Audio, Bryston, and some other companies believe that they should "separate" Audio from Video.
It's a good idea, but HDMI is both Audio & Video combined. The 11a & the upcoming Bryston pre-pro both contain HDMI inputs. So how can they truly separate Audio & Video?
By giving you 2 HDMI Inputs/1 Output, instead of 6 or 8 Inputs/2 Outputs?
Right.
And if their theory is correct, then their pre-pros should kick a$$ when it comes to the measured specs, right?
The AVP-A1 has a crosstalk of -108dB @ 1kHz (Audioholics). It has THD of like 0.002%. SNR is -115dB. FR is 20Hz-20kHz +/- 0.00dB.
The 11a has a crosstalk of -92dB @ 1kHz (HTM). It has a THD of 0.02%. SNR is -121dB. FR is 20Hz-20kHz +/-0.07dB.
In real life, there's nothing to complain about in both cases. But if you want to go hard-core, the AVP-A1 beats the 11a in crosstalk, THD, & FR. The 11a (as well as the Marantz & Anthem) beats the AVP-A1 in SNR.
So I would rather get a refurbished AVP-A1 for $3,900 than pay $4,000 for a new 11a.
Now if I can get both a 11a + 11v refurbished for $4K, that would be a different story. But even then, I would still probably get the Denon AVP-A1.
