on 2012-01-26 20:23 Rick Womer wrote
I'm looking for something that will accept input from a turntable, CD player, 
DVD player, and maybe a computer; has a decent FM tuner; will supply ~30-40 
watts per channel through my 5 ohm EPI speakers; and will sound really good.  
By really good, I mean making an orchestra, piano, mezzo-soprano, or organ 
sound like an orchestra, piano, mezzo-soprano, or organ.

It's been so long since I researched this stuff that I don't even know where to 
begin.  Any suggestions?

first, i'm not a *phile, just *enjoyer; hope this helps

almost everything except the high-end these days has gone to surround sound and dropped the phono inputs; since i listen to records fairly often, for a while my solution was to buy used older receivers; i still have a Yamaha RX-1100 on my computer, and a Yamaha RX-v595a on my upstairs TiVo; the latter was my living room receiver for a while and both have driven Canton Karat 100s to my satisfaction, no idea exactly how many watts, etc; both can switch analog video as well as audio, and we use that feature since the upstairs TiVo is analog-only (with a lifetime subscription, so we keep it alive via transplants because it also reduces the monthly rate for our TiVo HD)

speaking of old-school i have a gorgeous minimalist Advent 300 receiver in the garage that i feel should replace the RX-1100; it's strong enough to drive the Cantons to desk listening levels, and i don't need video, and among other things it has a very nice phono preamp

when we put a digital TV next to the turntable downstairs, change was necessary; i bought a Marantz NR1501 as a somewhat minimal surround-sound receiver that can handle everything i need; phono goes in through a cheapish Rolls VP29 preamp, and the Marantz can switch just that input to plain stereo and still do surround on the other channels; if you're like me and you go this route you won't see the point of tossing your mains just to get a matched set of surround speakers ... the nice thing about this receiver (and a fair number of others, but mostly more expensive) is that it can listen to itself and balance all the speakers for you; to me it is very much "good enough", and it saves a tremendous amount of trial and error and guesswork, since i have an asymmetrical situation and a very mixed speakers (low-end B&W mains, a modest Polk center channel, Radio Shack Minimus-7s for surround, some little Klipsch bookshelves for rear surround, plus an Infinity PS-10 sub)




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