Yamaha RX-V2600
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CNET Editors' Review
The good: The Yamaha RX-V2600 is an advanced 7.1-channel A/V receiver with advanced autosetup capabilities, the ability to upconvert analog video to HDMI (with upscaling to 720p/1080i), and an XM-ready satellite radio function. In addition to its high-end build quality, the receiver offers A/B speaker switching and THX Ultra 2 certification.
The bad: Multilayered menus and baffling navigation design may confound even experienced home-theater mavens. And while the HDMI video options are impressive, inferior processing and the lack of 1080p support puts the Yamaha squarely behind Denon's comparable models.
The bottom line: The Yamaha RX-V2600's seductive sound is matched by its up-to-the-minute features and stellar build quality, but its video options fall just short of the best we've seen.
We imagine most RX-V2600 owners will go ahead and use the Yamaha Parametric Room Acoustic Optimizer (YPAO) autosetup system, which not only determines speaker size and volume level but measures the distances from the speakers to the listener, checks the wiring, and uses equalization to balance the frequency response of all the speakers. YPAO is an automatic system, but you still have to navigate the receiver's rather convoluted video and input-assignment setup menus. We'd like to see something a lot more intuitively designed here. On the upside, the setup is extremely accurate.
The Yamaha RX-V2600's power amplifiers generate a lot of heat, so don't even think of placing this bad boy inside a cabinet, or at least one that's not ventilated. Reading the owner's manual, we discovered you can select continuous cooling fan operation, which can no doubt help, but we'd still want to make sure the receiver doesn't overheat. The menus also offer controls to compensate for the relative volume level when you switch between FM radio, DVD, your cable box, and other sources, so the volume doesn't suddenly jump up or down.
The receiver's remote is fully backlit and has a small illuminated LCD screen that displays the selected source. The large buttons for receiver volume and TV channel are handily positioned, and the side-mounted slide switch provides easy control of your TV, other selected sources, and the receiver itself. You also get a second, small remote for use in a second zone or room, but because it's infrared and not RF, you'll need a signal repeater that's wired back to the receiver in order to use it.This seven-times-130-watt Yamaha RX-V2600 receiver isn't lacking for features and sports most of the latest surround processing modes: Dolby Pro Logic IIx, Dolby Digital EX; DTS-ES Discrete 6.1, Neo:6, 96/24, plus THX Select2 processing. The only one missing is Dolby Headphone surround processing, but Yamaha engineers probably left that out because the V2600 instead uses Yamaha's Silent Cinema to produce quasi-surround sound over stereo headphones. Oh, and there's an adjustable lip-sync function for use with video displays that lag behind the audio.
Connectivity options will fulfill the needs of even the most complex home-theater installations: You get a total of six A/V inputs (including the one front-panel input) with S-Video. High-def sources are also well served: three inputs can be toggled to accept component video, and two more can handle HDMI. Even better, any of the analog sources (composite, component, or S-Video) can be converted to component or HDMI output at 480p, 720p, or 1080i. (To be clear, while 720p and 1080i are high-definition resolutions, do not expect to see a true HD picture on your display; as with upscaling DVD players, the real goal here is to better match the video resolution to something that's more easily "digested" by your HD display.) The 480p progressive-scan option is particularly important because it maximizes compatibility with HDTVs; many older models can't accept a 480i video signal via HDMI. If you're comparing this model to Denon's similarly priced ($1,100) AVR-2807 , that model features only conversion to 480p via HDMI. To get 720p and 1080i upconversion in Denon's A/V receiver line, you currently have to step up to the $2,000 AVR-4306.
Digital audio inputs are plentiful--there are six opticals and three coaxials--along with two optical outputs. Audiophiles will appreciate the turntable and analog 5.1-channel SACD/DVD-Audio inputs. The receiver also has 7.1-channel preamp connections to hook up a separate power amplifier. Like most receivers, the RX-V2600 is XM-ready--just add an XM Connect-and-Play antenna (such as the Audiovox CNP1000) and sign up for the $13 a month subscription, and you're good to go.
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Ex-movie theater projectionist Steve Guttenberg has also worked as a high-end audio salesman, and as a record producer. Steve currently reviews audio products for CNET and works as a freelance writer for Home Theater, Inner Fidelity, Tone Audio, and Stereophile. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
User Reviews
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stars 14 of 15 users found this review helpful
"Well executed receiver with all the bells & whistles" By datadan
Pros video scaling, power, multi-room flexibility, HDMI up-conversion
Cons HDMI switching compatibility issue with SA 8300 HD DVR from TWC (not a Yamaha problem)
Summary This is the first receiver that I could justify spending more than $600 on. The HDMI and video scaling features were well worth the extra $$. I scale all video sources to 1080i and send all video through a single HDMI connection to my TV. The remote was a perfect replacement ... Expand full review
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