Avr750 Review
Avr750 Review
Avr750 Review
Peter Moncrieff
Just two simple things you need to know.
First, the Arcam AVR750 is a stunning advance in decoding
and playing back of all your digital media. With my best digital
recordings (on various media), the Arcam AVR750 produced
sound an order of magnitude better (yes, 10 times better) than I
have ever heard before (with video quality to match).
Second, the Arcam AVR750 contains one of the few amplifiers on the planet (the others being megabuck monoblocks)
that give you both guts and glory. Indeed, I feel the Arcam
AVR750 can lay claim to being the worlds best Class AG amplifier, giving you both the guts (dynamic force and stupendous
bass) that Class G can excel at, as well as the sonic glory
(transparent, pure accuracy) that Class A can excel at.
And that, to paraphrase Keats, is all ye need to know. Just
ring up your nearest Arcam dealer, get your hands on an
AVR750, and start listening for yourself, hearing all your digital
sources as you have never heard them before. You can thank
me laterbut also, above all, thank the Arcam engineers whose
creative talent and assiduous work has wrought such a huge
advance over their already superb previous efforts.
Digital Revelations
In my 2011 review of Arcams AVR400 (the most recent and
advanced of Arcams previous generation of A/V surround receivers),
I lauded it for being the first to crack open the door to digitals future,
giving us a tantalizing peek of what the future could bring us from
hi-res digital sources via interfaces such as HDMI, USB, and network
connection to computer servers. The AVR400s sophisticated
circuitry, especially its professional-grade jitter reduction, for the
first time conquered the bad jitter and noise inherent in these digital
sources and interfaces, thereby introducing us to truly good sound
from these problematic digital sources and interfaces (instead of
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Power Output
2 channels driven, 20 Hz to 20 kHz, <0.02% THD: 120 Watts
(8 Ohms), 200 Watts (4 Ohms)
2 channels driven, 1 kHz, 0.2% THD: 130 Watts, 210 Watts
7 channels driven, 1 kHz, 0.2% THD: 100 Watts,
Audio Performance
Signal/Noise Ratio: 110 dB
Frequency Response: 20 Hz to 20 kHz 0.1 dB
Inputs/Outputs
Video Inputs: HDMI (7), Component (3), Composite (4)
Audio Inputs: HDMI (7), Coaxial SPDIF (4), TosLink (2), RCA
Phono (6), USB (1), Ethernet Client (1), Internet Radio, ARC
Video Outputs: HDMI (2), Z2 (1)
Audio Outputs: 7.1-channel Pre-Amp, Zone 2
General
Surround Modes: Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus, Dolby Digital
Surround EX, Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Pro Logic IIx, DTS-HD
Master Audio, DTS-ES 6.1 Discrete, DTS-ES 6.1 Matrix, DTS 5.1
Power Consumption (Max): 1.5 kW (5200 BTU/hour)
Power Consumption (Standby): <0.5 Watts
Specifications
Dimensions (WHD In Inches): 17.4 x 6.7 x 16.7
Weight (In Pounds): 36.8
MSRP: $5,999
Manufactured By:
Arcam
Arcam Pembroke Avenue
Waterbeach Cambridge
CB25 9QR England
Phone: 011 44 1223 203200
Web Site: arcam.co.uk
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which you have set it up and are using it. Think of this section, then,
as a helpful guide to getting the most out of your AVR750s capabilities, and thus, experiencing it at its best.
First, of course, you should make sure that the rest of your system
is worthy of the AVR750. The AVR750 easily reveals the strengths
(and weaknesses) of the very finest components in the rest of the
system, so it deserves to be partnered with the very best system
components you can afford.
I partnered the AVR750 with my lab reference system, which
includes: an Arcam BDP300 Blu-ray Disc player, an Esoteric silver
disc player mounted on a Mapleshade mounting system, an Arcam
D33 two-channel outboard DAC, and a surround array of seven B&W
802D full-range loudspeakerswith new Return of the Legend
power cords and analog interconnects by Von Gaylord, digital coax
interconnect by Mapleshade, Nordost Valhalla 1 loudspeaker cable,
and Nordost Optix coax video interconnect.
The video from the AVR750 is superlative, continuing what is now
the Arcam tradition of providing you with video that actually surpasses the video coming directly from most video sources (thanks to
Arcams superior video processing, drive circuitry, etc.). I continue to
be especially impressed by Arcams mastery of subtle luminance
gradations in the midrange. Other video products often go for the
superficially impressive flash of high contrast, emphasizing the luminance extremes while failing to be adequately discerning about subtle variations in the middle of the luminance range. As a result, they
look cartoonish, and human flesh acquires a monotone that looks like
too much pancake makeup on the actors. But this vital luminance
midrange is where, for a discriminating viewer, video reality occurs
and either looks believably real and three-dimensional or cartoonishly
unreal and two-dimensionally flat. Thats why Arcams superior video
is consistently more realistic to the eyes of a viewer who knows and
recognizes what reality actually looks likeeven though it might
appear less impressive to the eyes of a nave viewer who only wants
video images to flash and pop.
You should break in the AVR750 with at least 100 hours of playing
loud material that has a lot of high-frequency transients. Fresh out of
the box, the AVR750 (like many other high-end products) sounds
slightly brittle, but after 100 hours of active signal play it gradually
settles into sounding as described above: neutral and accurate,
articulate, yet also musically natural.
Even though the AVR750s sonic advances mostly pertain to digital sources, the AVR750 also honors analog inputs. Its Cirrus Logic
codec does an excellent job of A/D conversion, as well as D/A conversion, especially as Arcams engineers have specially configured
it. In other surround processors, inputting an analog signal to then be
converted to digital for processing, to then be converted again to
analog for output, was a recipe for sonic disaster. There was just too
much degradation after the signal had been through two conversions. But in the AVR750, for the first time, I can award a rating of
3/4
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