Yamaha RX V657 A/V Receivers
Yamaha RX V657 A/V Receivers
USER REVIEWS
[Jul 10, 2020]
bigmac
Strength:
I use this in a bedroom an love it! Have it hooked up to a pair of Boston's a60 in stereo with no sub. It does the job I need it to. This was my first yamaha I've ever owned. I enjoyed in my audio rig for a while an enjoyed it tremendously. Weakness:
I think the display could be brighter at the highest setting. An only reason I upgraded was for a phono input an hdmi. Purchased: Used
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[Apr 15, 2006]
jchiggins
AudioPhile
Strength:
Musicality, tonal correctness, lack of unpleasant character, tons of options, reasonable price.
Weakness:
Anyone who expects top notch audiophile performance will be disappointed, however, the errors are subtractive, inocuous, and don't get in the way of enjoying the music, keepiing in mind it's peers and the fact that it sounds as good or better as things costing up to four times more it's a steal. I wanted to get into my first Home Theater setup for a reasonable amount of money but also am quite demanding on the audio portion of the performance due to twenty years of audiophiling with lots of excellent gear. I decided to leap on the Yamaha RX-V657 receiver given and excellent review in Perfect Vision. Well, I dawled and by the time I leaped, they were all gone except for some Ebay B stock items without warranty. (No Thanks) By the way, unless you buy from an authorized Yamaha dealer or one of the dozen internet dealers on the approved list from their web site, they won't honor the warranty here in the states so you must rely on the internet seller to fix it (Right) Not finding the receiver I wanted, or a RX-V757, I did find what appears to be it's successor in the RX-V 659. Seems to be the same unit made Ipod ready, and knowing how Mid fi manufacturers love to put new knob and change some irrelevant details cheaply and call it a new model. I got one figuring it to be substantially the same as the well reviewed about unit.
Customer Service Ken Cranes gave me a pretty good price and rolled over quickly. Similar Products Used: Not many however I have owned some older Rotel, Nikko (remember those?) and newer and older NAD equipment. |
[Nov 18, 2005]
Vinyl Rules!
AudioPhile
Strength:
1. Extraordinarily good sound for an A/V receiver - Great on Music AND Video sources. 2. YPAO set up is extremely accurate except for the LFE settings. 3. Incredible audiophile value for the $$$.
Weakness:
1. Poorly designed remote control and remote control interface with the receiver. 2. Yamaha defaults the LFE setting to 90Hz: This can be lower for most H/T systems. 3. Manual could be better. Chris Marten gave this unit a very very good review in the current issue of "The Perfect Vision." He has uncovered a real gem here and maybe the audiophile buy of the decade: This is an incredible sounding and incredible performing unit for under $2,000 and will really hurt the sales of the more expensive A/V receivers from other manufacturers like Denon, Onkyo, Pioneer, Sony, etc. This unit has even garnered great reviews in the UK publications and they generally are somewhat xenophobic and usually only give great reviews to UK manufacturers. Well not this time: "What Hi-Fi" gave it their highest marks and recognized what a value it represents. The YPAO set up makes it very easy for non-techies to properly calibrate their system and get good sound once everything is connected to the receiver. Hell, Yamaha even gives you a room calibration mike for free that some other manufacturers charge extra for. This model also has 7.1 analog pre-amp outputs, so you can use it as an A/V pre-amp, which is what I am doing in my A/V system. And it even has a pretty decent analog FM tuner in it. It is also XM Radio ready, but as others have noted, neither XM Radio or Sirius can match the quality of a good terrestrial FM station - Keep supporting your local Public Radio Stations during their pledge drives so we don't lose our last source of good quality analog FM! Consider this: NO ONE makes an A/V pre-amp with this functionality that sounds this good for under $2K, so why spend more? You don't have to use this as a receiver: It is a superb A/V pre-amp, too! As an A/V pre-amp, the RX-V657's closest competition is the $1100 Outlaw A/V pre-amp and the RX-V657 has significantly more features for about a third (street price) of the Outlaw's price. And Yamaha began doing research on sound field enhancement long before DPLII and DPLIIx were invented. I was skeptical that the "Vienna Music Hall" or the "Roxy Theater" would make much of a difference until I tried them. When I played some Janis Joplin using the "Roxy Theater" effect I was stunned - It was much better than DPLII in the Music mode. I've seen Janis perform live (telling my age here ;-) and the "Roxy Theater" effect was really like being at one of her concerts. And the "Vienna Music Hall" is really great on many classical recordings. My only criticism is the poor design and interface of the remote. I was spoiled by my previous Onkyo A/V unit's remote - I could push one button and easily see what sound field mode the unit was in and could easily switch between the DPLII Music and Movie mode. The Yamaha's remote makes you push multiple buttons to make this kind of sound field change. © 2005 by Tim Britt (timbritt@cyber-wizard.com) Similar Products Used: Onkyo TS-DX696 |