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Yamaha HTR-6030SL 5.1-Channel Digital Home Theater Receiver (Silver)


List Price: $229.95
Now Only: $179.99
You Save: $ 49.96 ( 22% )
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Average Customer Rating:
Manufacturer: Yamaha


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Batteries Included: Yes
Batteries: 2
Brand: Yamaha
Color: Silver
EAN: 0027108927510
Label: Yamaha
Manufacturer: Yamaha
Model: HTR-6030SL
Release Date: 2007-03-15

Features
500 watts of total output power
Dolby Digital, Dolby Pro Logic II, and DTS decoding
3 HDTV-compatible component video inputs
XM-ready with XM HD Surround powered by Neural Surround
4 SCENE buttons offer easier operation

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Editorial Reviews:

Yamaha's HTR-6030 5.1 Channel Digital Home Theater Receiver is the heart of your new Home-Theater system and can best complement the performance of your HDTV for surround sound. Take your audio and video performance to a higher level with all the latest new features. The new SCENE buttons let you access every piece of your home theater system with a button. Get more powerful audio from music and movies with Dolby Pro Logic II & DTS Digital Surround. It's also XM Ready - get 150 channels of satellite radio through your 5.1 system (XM subscription required). CINEMA DSP Digital lets you feel every sound effect; SILENT CINEMA and Virtual CINEMA DSP lets you hear large-scale surround sound through ordinary headphones. Richer, more detailed audio is finally here. Dolby Digital, DTS and Dolby Pro Logic II decoding Audio Delay for adjusting lip-sync Compressed Music Enhancer Neural Surround XM ready; XM HD Surround compatible 192 kHz/24-bit D/A conversion Virtual CINEMA DSP Analog mixdown Sleep timer 40 station auto preset tuning 8 Surround Sound programs Speaker A, B or A+B selection Selectable subwoofer crossover 6-Channel decoder Includes Learning Remote Color - Silver Dimensions(WxHxD) - 17-1/8 x 5-15/16 x 12-1/2 Weight - 17.6 lbs.


User Comments about the Yamaha HTR-6030SL 5.1-Channel Digital Home Theater Receiver (Silver)

When I installed the Yamaha I noticed a much richer sound. It isn't super powerful but sounds good in an average (medium sized) viewing area. I burned out a Pioneer before this. Many features and simple to install.



But I ended up figuring it out myself without the manual(its a guy thing) And the sound is GREAT, my subwoofer that I thought wasnt that good ended up sounding a thousand times better with this guy, than my previous unit. It hits ALL of the lows when I want to get a little urban, and nice with Rock music(my favorite). Well the reason why I gave this product 4 Stars is because it was at first complicated to equalize the speakers. The Highs that this unit produces is great, while watching a movie it had me looking around my room because it sounded so real.But the silver color is a little hard to find matching equipment, but i'll work it out.Overall, nice job Yamaha.



Part of the initial setup includes telling the receiver how many speakers are in your setup, what the size of the drivers is, whether or not you want bass to be played through all the speakers or just the front, and then the speaker distances from the listener position. Many other factors come into play which will have more of an impact on sound quality than nominal wattage figures. Compared to the menus used a few years back, they are actually improved. It is counter intuitive in many instances and navigating through the menu options is quite annoying at times. It does not sound as crisp, is not as accurate, and one must push up the bass and treble to make up for this. It was model HRT-5640, and throughout this review I made various comparisons to it, for it was the first Yamaha receiver I had experience with. I have played around with the various surround modes and I have come to like the traditional pro-logic setting the best.


With 1 coax digital in and 2 optical, there is room for a digital tv receiver, a dvd player, and another digital device (blueray, hd dvd, ps3 etc). It was priced at 299.99 when I purchased it, and is a 6.1 channel home theater receiver. This worried me, as weight is sometimes an indicator of performance and sound quality in a receiver/amplifier. Also, the audio delay circuit which allows the user to delay the sound from 1 to 100 milliseconds in one millisecond intervals works as advertised.


I give this unit a 7 out of 10, which would have been higher, had I not been in a position to do A-B sound comparisons with another Yamaha unit. It was not nearly as heavy as the Yamaha receiver it was replacing. The surrounds and center were left with cheap feeling clip-in terminals, which did not easily accept my Monster Cable XP speaker wire. The display on the receiver notifies you of the type of signal it is receiving when your input is digital, whether it is a coaxial digital connection or through one of the two optical inputs the receiver has.


Most prime time TV shows are broadcast in Dolby Digital. Another difference was the lack of a jog dial to cycle through inputs and other menu options. Overall, for $155.00 I am pleased with the purchase. After hours of research I found out that this was a common problem among HD broadcasts and LCD TV's (I have a Sony 46V3000 which I love and prefer to the ever popular Samsung x61 x65 etc. When a digital 5.1 signal is detected, the screen changes to read Dolby Digital.


I actually had been using a Yamaha receiver in this set up, which I purchased from Best Buy a few years back when I worked their my freshman year of college. Finally, this unit did not have binding posts for all the speakers, just the main A and B. Compared to the older unit, which was rated at 75 watts per channel, the sound quality is definitely not as good. The thing that led me to this receiver was past experience with Yamaha home theater products, price point of this unit, and the audio-delay feature, also known as lip sync correction.


The whole wattage rating system in consumer level home theater receivers is not all that it is cracked up to be. After that is complete, you are only left with bass and treble adjustments. However, the silver lining on all this is that the receiver does sound good for its purpose as a home theater reliever.


I purchased this receiver about a month ago for use in a home theater set up which consists of 2 Polk R50 floor standing speakers, a csi3 center channel, and no surrounds (they will be added at a later date, and most likely be Polk monitor 30 2-ways. After a day or two of playing with the menus, they become slightly more user friendly. Signal is optical running directly from my FiOS receiver.


Setup on these Yamaha receivers is tricky at first. The reason I decided to look for a new receiver was because many of the HD channels from FiOS TV would have terrible lip sync issues when running the optical signal directly to the receiver and the HDMI cable from the receiver directly to the TV. panels).My first impression when I took the receiver out of the box was the weight.


At that price, when the 7.1 channel receivers with full 1080P HDMI connections and all that fun stuff come down in the next few years, it will not be as hard on the wallet to replace this one.


5 speakers and you can only add bass or treble to two. You can only adjust the bass and treble on the two front speakers. I was excited when I ordered this amp, great price free shipping. But it has a huge flaw. I hope all your source material is perfect or you will feel like I do and never buy Yamaha products again.



I use it for my SONY SSB1000. Sound is clear. Great sound. No annoying hiss.Fast shipping.






 


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