Varying types of Advent Bookshelf Speakers on sale today! Buy Advent Bookshelf Speakers now. Disc Sanders For Sale. Advent Wireless 2 Way Bookshelf Speaker System Remote Stereo Pair AW400 900 MHz. Advent AV5 Bookshelf and Center Channel Speakers. Replacement Advent and Acoustic Research Speakers and Parts - Authorized Advent & Acoustic Research Speaker Parts DISTRIBUTORFactory replacement Advent speaker parts, tweeters and woofers. If I play any Kohan game, its Ahriman's Gift. The expansion did not bring much in the way of content just some new units. But it's the If I play any Kohan game, its Ahriman's Gift. But it's the best of the series. Kohan ahrimans gift s full version. The expansion did not bring much in the way of content just some new units. I am finally in the market for a new receiver and (possibly) speaker system. I have looked into many options and have narrowed it down a bit, but cannot decide on which I should go with, so I am hoping the experts can help me out. My budget is $500-700 (if I ask the wife nicely). My current setup is a 9 yr old Kenwood 5.1 receiver and 5 Advent AV5 speakers - no sub I know my budget is not a ton of money, but I am no audiophile, I just simply want to be able to catch my system up to the present and hopefully ensure some future-proofing. I am currently trying to decide between the Onkyo SR607, the SR707 or the NR807. The difference being that if I go with one of the lower models I can also purchase a speaker setup with the extra money. I have considered the ht740 speaker package. So what do you think, 700 dollar receiver and keep the speakers I've got, or maybe a 400 dollar receiver and a new setup altogether. Any help would be greatly appreciated as I've been browsing these forums and others for almost a month now and am getting exhausted. I can't decide for you. I can only explain a few basics. I would say a powered Sub is somewhat important. Speakers are of importance as well, but I have no idea how good your speakers are. We can break a receiver's value into two parts. Feature set and power. For feature set, I would say the minimum is enough inputs, including HDMI and HDMI audio capability. Most people seem to prefer a receiver with lossless decoding. Video deinterlacing and scaling is of no real importance. The ability to convert analog video to HDMI is a nice feature if you are using (will be using) component video still. It will let you run a single HDMI cable to the TV. A feature some people want let's them watch TV with the receiver off. Yamaha has this, and it's called HDMI Standbye or something like that. ![]() For power, you want as much as you can afford. Receivers from the same manufacturer will have only a few major configurations. Multiple receiver models from the same MFG will have pretty much the same power supply and output regardless of their rated power. Note that ratings will be misleading - ignore them for the most part. It's tough to figure out whether spending a bit more money will give you more power or not. I can do it for Yamaha receivers, but that's because I have spent many hours reading specs, and looking at service manuals. One possible method is to look at cabinet size. ![]() For Yamaha if the cabinet size is different, there's a good chance the bigger cabinet is a more powerful receiver. You can also compare the weight of each model, a big jump in weight is an indication of a better power supply. Originally Posted by jaknell1011 I am finally in the market for a new receiver and (possibly) speaker system. I have looked into many options and have narrowed it down a bit, but cannot decide on which I should go with, so I am hoping the experts can help me out. My budget is $500-700 (if I ask the wife nicely).
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