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Yamaha RX-797 Audio/Video Receiver

Yamaha RX-797 Audio/Video ReceiverBrand: Yamaha
Category: CE

List Price: $549.95
Buy New: $499.95
as of 9/7/2010 16:57 CDT details
You Save: $50.00 (9%)



Seller: Amazon.com
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars reviews
Sales Rank: 14424

Color: Black
Media: Electronics
Batteries Included: Yes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 21.6
Dimensions (in): 15.4 x 17.1 x 5.9
Warranty: 2Yrs Manufacturer Warranty

MPN: RX-797
Model: RX-797
UPC: 027108923833
EAN: 0027108923833
ASIN: B000FHC0Y2

Shipping: Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Features:
  • 100W x 2 with .019%THD
  • Multi-Zone Control Capability with Dedicated Zone Remote Unit
  • XM Satellite Radio Ready
  • Super Audio CD and DVD-Audio Ready with Extended Frequency Response
  • Remote Controllable Motor-Driven Volume Control

Accessories:


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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Top Class High Power and Pure Sound Technology with ToP-ART, CD Direct Amplification and Linear Damping, Plus Convenient Features such as XM Radio Ready and Multi-Zone Control Capability CD / DVD Direct Amplification Circuit Engaged by a front panel switch, it matches CD / DVD signal levels so each stage produces less noise, resulting in improved S/N ratio and maintenance of the amps total gain balance. XM Ready A product with this feature indicates that the item is XM SATELLiTE RADiO (XM Ready), allowing you to hear over 150 digital channels of music, news, sports, talk and entertainment from America's number one Satellite Radio service. With the addition of the optional digital antenna XM Mini-Tuner Home Dock and the XM Mini-Tuner accessories sold separately, just subscribe to XM SATELLiTE RADiO and hear radio as it was meant to be!


Customer Reviews:



5 out of 5 stars Power for multi-room setups, and real quality   July 8, 2010
Basil Argyros (Corvallis, Oregon)
I bought this receiver to power an extensive multi-room household system. It has the power to do that -- actual output at 6 ohms is 120W per channel. It can easily power several rooms at a time.

Beyond high output, this receiver has surprisingly good quality, on a number of attributes:

1) Sound quality is very good. I'd describe myself as semi-audiophile -- picky about hi fi reproduction, without being cultish about it. I seriously considered much higher-priced receivers, before deciding to give this one a try based on the strength of its reviews. I have not been disappointed.

2) The stereo tuner is exceptional. The FM clarity is terrific even with the dinky wire antenna provided.

3) The adjustable Loudness control is a godsend. Anyone living in an apartment with thin walls -- or who has auditory problems requiring low volumes -- will love this feature. This control, which boosts high and low frequencies to compensate for lower ear sensitivity to these frequencies at low volume, provides a great mellow output that delivers detail from lows to highs when quiet listening.

4) Sturdy metal construction. The power supply on this thing is a beast, and weighs a ton.

5) Friendly controls -- mostly knobs, rather than tiny buttons.

6) Amber LED readout -- easy on the eyes in a dark room

Stereo receivers this good at a low to mid price point are almost nonexistent in the present market. Kudos to Yamaha for providing this one (and please don't screw it up in a future model change!).



5 out of 5 stars Out goes the old, in comes the new!   June 12, 2010
Thomas T. Mason
My 1985 yamaha R-9 bit the dust and I was in need of a new stereo. I bought the R-9 25 years ago when I was in the service for 350.00 thru the AFES, it listed retail like 900.00. I have been so impressed with the 797, especially the clarity! What was even nicer is the subwoofer link so you do not have to splice in speaker wires!


I highly recomend this unit! It rocks!



T



5 out of 5 stars Yamaha RX-797 is the total package!   February 26, 2010
Michael J. Anderson (Minneapolis, MN USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I bought this receiver on a recommendation from my friend who is an audiophile. I have it driving a pair of Definitive Technology Mythos ST SuperTowers. The sound is clean and punchy. It's very hard to find a 2 channel receiver with support for a second zone, which is what I needed. I couldn't be happier with this quality product from Yamaha. Will be buying two more to power additional zones in my whole-home audio system.


4 out of 5 stars Great sound, but...   February 5, 2010
J. Wayland Eheart (east central Illinois)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I bought this receiver to replace my Insignia NS R-2000 (which I will refer to as "the old one") for my home stereo (only, i.e., not 5.1 or 7.1) sound (only, i.e. no video) system. While the old one has the same nominal power as the RX-797 (100 watts per channel), it has greater distortion, both nominal and perceptible. More to the point, it just couldn't cut the mustard with my Vandersteen 2C speakers (which have a well-earned reputation as great speakers but equally great power hogs), so I decided to replace it with the 797, and have been very pleased with the sound. I'll echo the other reviewers' notes on the tuner, especially the FM tuner, which comes in with nice clarity and separation, even with the little included one-wire antenna, which, by the way is much more convenient to deploy than a folded dipole.

On those bases alone, I would give it 5 stars, but there are some downsides of inconvenience on the one hand and unnecessary bells and whistles on the other, all of which cost it one star. On the old one, the tone controls were adjustable with the remote; on the 797, they are not. This probably has to do with a purist approach to both tone and volume controls, using old fashioned continuously variable resistors rather than discrete switching (which are easier to control remotely). On the 797, only the volume control is remotely operable, and that because it is motor driven, a seemingly unnecessary complicated and expensive way to accomplish something that could be done more cheaply, but, again, the purist approach leads to this, I suppose. As a result, there is no visual display of volume level other than the position of the little dot on the knob. So there are old-fashioned knobs for bass, treble, balance and loudness which you have to get up out of your chair to operate. Mind you, I'm not lazy, it's just that I can't hear from the same perspective when I'm standing in front of the amplifier as when I'm sitting in the chair, so adjustment of these controls is a not-always accurate extrapolation.

So, unless those concessions to tradition are truly necessary for the sound quality, those are the Paleolithic qualities. On the other side of the ledger are the modern advances, which strike me as unnecessary and not particularly desirable. The array of inputs and outputs looks like the button rack at your local sewing shop, but most of them are not particularly useful. There are video in and out sockets, which makes no sense to me, even if it is to be used in a home theater setup. And there's some feature called Zone 2, which allows you to use the preamp section to do some parallel processing to feed to a power amp in a different room. This also requires a separate remote control receiver (although the Zone 2 remote transmitter is included). Both of these must be wired from the one room to the other. I find it hard to believe that all that trouble and expense would be less than that associated with just getting a separate sound system in the second room. Understand that, despite the vast array of inputs and outputs, this is still strictly a 2-channel device, and will not handle 5.1 or 7.1 inputs, although there is a subwoofer output (high-impedance only, not amplified) that, as far as I can tell, just combines the two channels. In a similar vein is the XM radio feature. From my perspective, XM offerings in classical music are paltry, and would hardly justify the subscription fee. It would save only one piece of hardware. You still have to buy the antenna, but only avoid buying the converter box that you would have to have with a regular amplifier or receiver setup.

With all the bells and whistles, the remote gets pretty crowded and the buttons accordingly pretty small, despite the absence of tone or balance controls. There are buttons on the remote having to with television whose functions are not clear to me. I would prefer fewer and larger buttons, but I suppose Yamaha is trying to appeal to a larger market. At any rate, the important buttons, viz., volume, on, and standby, are large enough and logically laid out.

The speaker connectors are definitely a weak link. They are difficult to operate and too close together. They take only banana plugs and bare wires. I haven't tried the banana jacks yet; they seem like they would work well, but would add to the depth dimension, which is already fairly hefty. The side connections of the posts are designed for bare wire only and will not accept spade lugs. The reason is that there is a collar around the post with a slot in it into which you insert your wire. That collar is too high to get a spade lug under, even with the screw completely retracted. The purpose of the collar is to prevent accidental shorting, I suppose, and to that degree it works well. It also helps to guide the wire to where it needs to go, which is important, given the crowding of the posts. But the post contacts and screws seem to be of cheap metal and don't operate very smoothly. I don't know what kind of metal because the insides are hard to see. They bind particularly on tinned wire ends, presumably because the force is concentrated in one spot, which rocks the screw to the side, causing it to bind. I recommend that you NOT tin your wires, because the collar does prevent shorting and spreads the force over a larger area which reduces binding.

Likewise, the high impedance in and out RCA jacks are NOT gold plated, a bit of a disappointment. Interestingly, my $80 Yamaha DVD player which I use as a CD player, does have gold plated RCA jacks

So, bottom line, I would have preferred to save a few bucks with something that didn't include Zone 2, XM, subwoofer out, or many of the other inputs and outputs. I could also do with less purist tone and volume controls (as long as I wasn't sacrificing sound quality), but would like better connectors. One thing I had on my old cheap tube Dynaco preamplifier that I would like to see and have not seen on any contemporary receivers is a separation control, which partially mixes the two channels. This allows blending of over-separated material, and forcing the material to be monaural, which is sometimes useful for testing connections and speaker defects.




5 out of 5 stars Yamaha RX-797   October 11, 2009
Electronics Eng. from MA (Massachusetts)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

I would highly recommend this stereo receiver, particularly if you want a solid two channel system that is able to drive high current into low impedance speakers without breaking a sweat [there is so much drive "head room" -- high dynamic power -- that you never get to distortion-causing "limiting" in the amplifier or from its power supply]. As 5 channel [an up] receivers proliferate, the availability of good two channel systems has declined considerably.

While multi-channel systems are certainly great for home theaters, providing a dynamic "imersive" experiance --- for enjoyable music listening, multi-channel's incremental sound experience improvement is only marginally better, if at all. Further, if the user is just interested music listening, two channel systems are simpler to set up in a room, since there are fewer speakers to be placed around the room [i.e. left, right and maybe a low-base unit --- no center or left/right rear speakers to be concerned with]. I still have my Yamaha RX-595 [which is very similar], purchased in 1998, for another room and it continues to perform excellently.

The RX-797 adds Sirius/XM capability and two listening zone capability [with an included second remote] and a slight power upgrade [100+100 watts instead of 80+80 watts for 8 ohm speakers, so this is a technical rather than a practical "improvement" over the older unit]. Both units share excellent damping factors [makes sure the speakers move the way the music wants, not the way the heavy speaker cones want], low level phono input, loudness control to correct for the ear's lower high and low frequency sensitivity as the volume is turned down, video switching, AM/FM receiver and the ability to send an output from one source to a recording device, while listening to another.

I am not a "Luddite" from 1811-16, but sometimes more is NOT better -- you have to fit the tool to the application. The choice is yours, good luck with yours.




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