Saturday, November 19, 2011

Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]


Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]

Average Customer Review:
Product Brand : Sony | Model : STR-DH710
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Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]


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Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]
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Ignite your home entertainment experience with the STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V receiver. With six HD inputs (3 HDMI and 3 component), you can take full advantage of all your high-definition components including a Blu-ray Disc player or PS3 system. Everything you hear will sound as close to the master recording as possible with Dolby TrueHD and dts HD decoding technologies. This receiver also features wireless 2nd zone audio capabilities, which allows you transmit wireless audio in up to 10 additional rooms via optional S-AIR accessories. Plus, access all of your HDMI connected devices without having to power on the receiver thanks to standby pass-through..../ Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible] / subwoofer


.../ Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible] / subwoofer


Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]
subwoofer
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Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]
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Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]
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Customer Review :

Hdmi Pass through works, some tech sustain headaches : Sony STR-DH710 7.1-channel A/V Receiver with 6 HD Inputs [3D Compatible]


Well, not quite Doa. I was looking for an entry level 7.1 ideas and normally avoid Sony products like the plague. Well, this receiver had decent power at 105w X7, had Dd+, Dd5.1, Dd-Ex, Dts-Hd, Dts, Dts-Es 6.1 matrix and discrete, Dd Plii, Plz, Plx, 3 Hdmi inputs, and 3D support. Basically it had mostly every highlight you could need and all the decoders you could ever want at 199.99. When comparing this to the 810 and Onkyo's entry level 7.1 receiver it was clear this one was the one to go with. I read all the reviews there were only a incorporate bad ones and the complaints seemed to be based nearby citizen not being able to plug in analog cables and yield their signals through Hdmi (which I have no use for that highlight which by the way is on the Sony 810).

I received the receiver, hooked up my speakers but because I forgot to label the speaker wire for the rear channels I had to use the test tone to form out if they were connected right and if not how I needed to switch them to make sure they were set up right. The test tone worked so I turned off the receiver, re-wired the speakers, turned the receiver back on then the test tone wouldn't work. The by hand said that if the test tone didn't work then whether the wiring wasn't derive or the neg/pos were crossed. This receiver has tiny speaker inputs so if you have even semi-big gauge wire it won't fit cleanly. I rewired my speaker cables, I re-stripped them mental they just needed to be fresh, I electric-taped everywhere on the cable that had exposed wire. I did an immaculate job on the wiring, let the receiver sit over night unplugged mental it needed to reset, and also did the ideas reset mental maybe it was in protect mode (which the receiver's display never said it was). It still wouldn't work.

After running through hours of tests, plugging in distinct Hdmi sources, unplugging obvious speaker wire, etc. And never getting a test-tone or sound at all I called Sony and they ran me through the steps I had already ran through myself. They told me I needed to take the receiver to the nearest servicing town to get it repaired free-of-charge. I called the servicing town and they said companies stopped doing repairs on audio receivers years ago and do exchanges instead. He himself said they hadn't worked on receivers that weren't top-of-the-line for 5 years. I called Sony back and they looked up an additional one service town and there were none. So they told me to ship it to them at my cost (they would cover the shipping back) and I would get it in two weeks. I said no thanks; I'll just replacement it for a new one.

I called electronics expo who was great and they paid for shipping both ways ala Microsoft and the 3Rrod. They emailed me a shipping label that day. Shipping to them was ground and it took a week to get there (west coast to east cost) and they are 2-day shipping it back whether today or tomorrow.

I'll modernize my divulge when I get the replacement whether Friday or Monday.

Update #1 (Feb 19 2011)

So I received my replacement receiver yesterday. Hooking it up was a breeze, set up took a puny longer (more fine-tuning than anything). The speaker inputs on back of receiver are a puny small (other than the front channels) so if you have large gauge wire you'll have a hard time getting it in cleanly.

My biggest question with this receiver is the cumbersome set-up menus. Turns out the receiver I sent back originally probably wasn't precisely broken, it was just user error (instructions are written confusing in some areas). I think myself a techy near-audiophile so for me to mess up and not understand how to turn on the test tone is pretty embarrassing.

The only other question I have with the receiver is the sound settings for surround sound. I have a 7.1 set-up but the receiver according to the by hand only has Dolby Pro Logic Iix (Pliix) for converting a 5.1 movie into a 7.1 so if you want to get sound out of all 4 surround speakers you Have to use Pliix. The other surround modes, Auto Format Direct (A.F.D.), C.St.Ex (Cinema Studio Ex) A, B, and C, V.M. Dim (V. Multi Dimension), Plii Mv (Pro Logic Ii Movie), and Neo6 Cin (Neo:6 Cinema) don't mention everywhere that they will provide you with sound to all 8 of your speakers. Only Pliix states it'll provide you with sound to all 8 speakers. After some investigating it turns out that the C.St.Ex (A, B, and C) will give you sound to your surround back speakers as will A.F.D.- A.F.D. From what I believe gives you the sound right from the disc without adding any pre-programmed sound fields but what confuses me is how the surround back speakers are getting sound when what is being sent to the receiver is only 5.1. It seems that whether the receiver "fakes" 7.1 with any 5.1 signal it gets regardless of the sound mode you've premium (barring 2 channel stereo of course) or it just sends the same signal the 2 side speakers get to the back speakers. Of procedure this is nearly impossible to test so I'm now trying to resolve which is better, Pliix which claims to up change 5.1 to "discrete" 7.1 surround or just go with whether A.F.D. Or C.St.Ex A,B,C that claims nowhere that'll up change 5.1 to 7.1 even though sound does come out of all 8 speakers. If the Bluray movie you're watching is encoded in true 7.1 Dts Hd specialist Audio the receiver auto switches to that mode and cancels any pre-programmed sound field you may have turned on so you're getting true 7.1. If only more movies were encoded in 7.1...

The sound is great, the auto calibration seemed to work fine but for my own personal preference I like to hear the surround speakers a puny more than the default so I had to fine-tune the surround speakers to the volume I prefer.

Other than the cumbersome menu ideas and confusing sound mode descriptions I'd without fail recommend this receiver to whatever outpatient adequate to learn the ins & outs of it.

Edit #2:

So after some explore with the sound fields, it turns out the Pliix Mv (Pro Logic Iix movie) is the best way to go to watch 5.1 movies in 7.1. I used the cinema studio Ex mode and A.F.D (auto format) for a while watching a 5.1 movie on Bd, and while I did hear sounds out of the surround back left and right channels, it was precisely quite even after turning the back surround channels all the way up to 10. Once I switched the sound mode to Pliix Mv the back surround channels were far more distinct, separated, and easier to hear. It all nearby sounds best using Pliix Mv for 5.1 movies with a 7.1 speaker set-up than it does using the other modes. Even the side surround channels sounded better.

Edit #3:

One thing to note, after using the receiver for a incorporate weeks, it turns out that sometimes it switches amp mode from just amp to "Tv/Amp" in the menu settings. I don't know what causes it, but it's a bit annoying. The other thing, with the Hdmi-Cec thing when you try to turn the volume up on your Tv when the receiver is set to "Amp" instead of "Tv/Amp" in the audio yield menu your Tv remote will precisely turn your receiver volume up instead and a Hud on your Tv will display the current volume (inaccurately) that your receiver is at. It only works (poorly) sometimes. At this point I'm just nick-picking because these are smile gripes and they're not features I precisely need nor was expecting. But I plan I'd point it out anyway.

If you have this receiver, have a 7.1 speaker set-up, and are watching a 5.1 source I would without fail recommend using Pliix Mv to watch your movies. If the movie is in 7.1 it will default to a discrete 7.1 mode. Here is a list of Bd movies that sustain 7.1 discrete audio. [...]
Pros- Great sound, many options, very customizable.

Cons- Confusing menu system, confusing sound field descriptions, confusing manual.


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