One thing I've noticed when looking around at all the audio gear online, most of the better 2-channel stuff, the integrated amps, CD players, etc. have lots of nice internal shots of them showing the build, guts, etc. but internal photos of A/V receivers are not so easy to come by.
What is it that they are hiding? Even groups like this which does a lot of rigorous testing don't routinely show the internals of A/V receivers very often. Judging from the few that I've seen I can see why. Most of them don't look very nice, at least not the lower to mid level units. I'm not an engineer, but it doesn't take a degree to see the qualitative differences between this Yamaha A-S501 integrated amp and Yamaha RX-V681 A/V receiver.
The A-S501, by no means an expensive, high-end integrated, looks clean and nicely laid out, with nice, thick, dual heat sinks. While the RX-V681 looks sloppy and congested, with a single, thin, cheap heat sink and a noticeably cheaper looking EI transformer. Both units retail for around the same price.
My question is, why can't they make the AVR's more like the integrateds? Or better yet, why not make the integrateds more like an AVR? There is plenty of room in the A-S501 for the extras. It is actually a larger, heavier unit then the RX-V681. You don't need to put any silly surround-sound modes in it that no one ever uses or networking features as these can all be handled through your TV, Blu-Ray player, Amazon Fire, Roku, etc. Instead, why not focus on better overall quality?
Of course, then it would no longer be a 2-channel integrated amp but my question is why is it acceptable in the industry to cheapen out like this on an AVR but not for the integrateds? Why is there so little demand for better quality?
These AVR's keep getting cheaper and cheaper as the years go by bordering on the ridiculous, and it's not just the internals but the whole package. It's almost to the point where it's not even really worth buying any but the very top end models. All of them, regardless of brand, look about the same on the inside, with the same cheap, crappy parts. Some of them, like the Sony's and Pioneer's aren't even rated for 4 ohms. The cheapest integrated in Yamaha's line up ($349) is rated for 4 ohms, as is all their other integrateds. I'm about to say the hell with this and just buy a good integrated and stay 2-channel. At least I won't have to worry about my A/V receiver fizzing out in about 1 to 2 years.