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Juan of 11
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As GL stated speakers are the things you can "hear" the biggest differences in. Hard for most to hear the differences between similarly powered amps.
A/B ing, used to be the best way to choose your preferred speakers. What people like in speakers can be subjective and very personal. Unfortunately, its almost impossible to stand in front of two complete systems and do the a/b back and forth on the same music/video. AV systems/amplifiers have specifications: Rated wattage output continuous. (not peak) In the stereo days it was per channel (2) with a frequency range - say 20-20,000 with a Total harmonic distortion %. Now the mfgs like to play fast and loose with things but if you dig you can ususally find them. The rest in all interoperability things which becomes sepcific to what you are using the system for.... TV, TV and MP3, DVD, remote speakers, Sat radio, etc. Easy to end up spending 2-3 times as much as you did just for the Receiver. Once you get these things home you either like or dont like them. If you like the sound ... be happy with it. At the price point you bought at it's hard to get pickey with things. If it does all the interoperability things you want and sounds good... to you, well you are good to go. Quote:
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Communities Not Commodities. Punctuation challenged, but trying. Proud winner of phase 1 of the Weight loss contest |
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