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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
AVR vs Stereo Integrated
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<blockquote data-quote="santoshlv426" data-source="post: 993287" data-attributes="member: 1941"><p>Dedicated is always better but you need to be a "technical" listener to discern the various nuances and subtleties. </p><p></p><p>I follow the rule l remember from the days of Tape Decks when - as all high schoolers needed was the essential Mix Tape but being me, I wanted a tape deck with good quality and the rule was a double deck will never be as good as a dedicated single deck. </p><p>1 box with two sets of tape mechanisms vs 1 with dedicated electronics to process music - you do the math. </p><p>Similarly there's so much electronics in AVR's the ability of it to amplify an analogue signal as good as a dedicated Stereo is impossible. </p><p>That said, the high end AVR's are very good. The Yamaha AVR 3050 (and I'm sure the 3080) sounds great with a dedicated CD Player.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="santoshlv426, post: 993287, member: 1941"] Dedicated is always better but you need to be a "technical" listener to discern the various nuances and subtleties. I follow the rule l remember from the days of Tape Decks when - as all high schoolers needed was the essential Mix Tape but being me, I wanted a tape deck with good quality and the rule was a double deck will never be as good as a dedicated single deck. 1 box with two sets of tape mechanisms vs 1 with dedicated electronics to process music - you do the math. Similarly there's so much electronics in AVR's the ability of it to amplify an analogue signal as good as a dedicated Stereo is impossible. That said, the high end AVR's are very good. The Yamaha AVR 3050 (and I'm sure the 3080) sounds great with a dedicated CD Player. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
AVR vs Stereo Integrated
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