Yamaha HTR-5760 A/V Receivers

Yamaha HTR-5760 A/V Receivers 

DESCRIPTION

  • Accurate Touch Volume Control
  • 192 kHz/24-Bit DAC for all Channels
  • Selectable 9-Band Subwoofer Crossover
  • Subwoofer Phase Select
  • Analog Mixdown
  • Straight/Effect Switch
  • 2-Channel Mode
  • High Dynamic Power, Low Impedance
  • Linear Damping

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-5 of 5  
[Oct 09, 2005]
ricksta
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

high power output,and I could change crossover frequencies with a very good sound menu .tons of inputs/outputs

Weakness:

presence speakers is low quality sound no video switching

this reciever has come to give me great pleasure since it came out of the box I like its big display of features,the lows have great bass that shakes floors,walls and windows.mids/highs are clean-crisp and sounds as good as it gets.really adjusts to any music or movie with a tremendous arsenal of dsp's(soundfields} with a good speaker selection I suggest at least 8ohms 200 watts and you can let it rip an I mean blast it really loud.....

Similar Products Used:

rx-v 995 rx-v 620

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Apr 19, 2005]
mr. budget
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

zone 2/presence, 7.1 (2 back surr), tons of sound prgrms, tons of sub x-overs, sub phs slct, tons of power, mlt chnl input pre out, tons of inputs/outputs, lots of tweaks/dsp tweaks, ypao mic, cool remote, 7-channel stereo, 2-channel stereo, pure direct, straight mode, indvdl speaker controls, very well thought out and just a pleasure to have.

Weakness:

The only way you could harm this is if you leave 7-channel stereo on at close to full volume all day and even then it might just never give.

(550cdn dollars)When I first got this one I didn't think it had enough power, but now I realized that it has a nice load of power, heck I've barely ever got it warm and I'm running 6 big speakers on surround, okay it gets a bit warm with music but every 6hours I just turn it off for a while. They thought of all of it here. It's more than adequate...it's amazing and for the price I don't see anything close. It even has tons of range settings on sub x-overs. It has pre outs and mlt chnl inputs so upgrade is good. This is an absolutely great rcvr for any stereo ht application...They didn't miss anything...If you want more power take the htr5790 but this one has enough power. I just didn't even take it over minus20db because it'll blow my speakers up, and my speakers are 300 watts each. There's no downside about this one.

Similar Products Used:

sony reciever (1985)

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Mar 09, 2005]
aserejeje
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

sound, features

Weakness:

have to go thru set up menu to use the dimmer and audio lift, remote not lit and not a learning remote

This is an awesome receiver, loaded with DSP's and clean powerful sound. The onscreen display was a little confusing but once you learn all the features it is a breeze.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
[Nov 22, 2004]
Fergusson
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Typical Yamaha quality even at this price. Excellent DSP effects, no-one does it better. Just about anything you would want to adjust, you can.

Weakness:

None to date.

In fact this is a report on the Yamaha HTR-5730 receiver (since product category does not exist at AudioReview at this time.) Much the same as the 5760, tho' -- so here goes. The 5730 delivers 5.1 channels, claiming 100 watts per ch. {I cannot foresee ever bothering with a 7-ch. system.} It's got a multitude of DSP settings, which function admirably; most useful to me are the Pro Logic II for movies & Stereo 5-Channel for music. I have my home theater set up in a fairly small room, carpeted & fairly dead acoustically. Speakers are mainly cheapo Radio Shack (Optimus brand), including a decent center channel w/ Linaeum tweeter & a robust sub, w/ separate 150 W. amp. This Yamaha receiver more than meets my requirements, which is mainly to watch DVD's at moderate vol's; HT is not true Hi-Fi in my opinion, & thus true audiophile criteria do not apply. So far (about one week of use), verdict is: a fine & functional piece of gear at a very reasonable price point. Some random observations -- remote has FAST volume control. "Silent Cinema" feature (for discrete listening thru cans) automatically mutes the speakers, allows you to use DSP programs to create illusion of surround in normal 2-channel 'phones .. (or so says the manual at any rate.) Do not fail to purchase Toslink (optical) cable separately [~ $25] if you buy this unit -- required for full access to the DSP functioning. Not super powerful, but can produce 105 dB peaks in my application. ... Setup is not intuitive, requires remote; but not too hard, either. One comment, you might want to go thru manual set-up (specifying spkr sizes & distances, etc.) in any case, even with a higher-priced unit .. I've read that the automatic YPAO set-up, avail. on Yamaha's of this type at about $400 & above, can definitely leave something to be desired. What else .. ? Oh, FM-tuner section works well .. speaker connections are not first-rate, binding posts for main L + R only, others are spring clips.

Similar Products Used:

None.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Nov 06, 2004]
Guyf
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Channel Separation, Definition, Home theater use.

Weakness:

Stereo, Music

The price in in $CDN. I bought this A/V receiver to replace a 20 year old Pionner that I use for stereo music only. I bought it quick, thinking that any modern amplifier had to be much better than this antique amplifier. Well, for stero music, it plain does not work. I have tried every possible settings, the music came out way too "clear" with a "shrill" that was no fun to listen too. There was no presence, no warmth at all in the music. If you wanted to dissect the music and hear the voices of each separate singers in a tune you could do it but the result was less than musical. I was ready to pack it back to Future shop but i decided to give it a try on my home cinema system. I first took the Denon 1801 which I hooked to my music stereo system. Excellent! The warmth, the presence the depth of the music was back and much better than with the old Pionner; just the way it should be. I then hooked up the Yamaha to the Encore speakers,I did the auto setup, which was mostly accurate, but that I tweaked to boost the bass a tad and the central speaker to help me with the dialogues. Excellent! More definition than the Denon, well defined bass since the crossover was set at 160 Hz (the Denon would not go under 80HZ, leaving a dead spot in the 80-150Hz zone. The DSP options are nice

Similar Products Used:

Denon 1801

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
Showing 1-5 of 5  

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