Powerful and packed with features without the flagship price tag.
By Daniel Kumin December 2010
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http://www.soundandvisionmag.com/3d/2010/12/test-report-onkyo-tx-nr1008-av-receiver
A check of Onkyo’s Web site shows no fewer than 17 different A/V receivers on offer, an almost General Motors-like profusion of models. (I’m pretty certain, however, the U.S. government won’t be stepping in on Onkyo’s behalf should the consumer elec- tronics industry go south.) To be fair, a half-dozen or so are last year?s models, but still. C’mon, guys, 17???
However you want to count them, Onkyo’s new TX-NR1008, which is a couple hundred dollars cheaper (and some 10 pounds lighter) than the identically powered TX- NR1007, lies pretty much squarely in the middle of this embarrassment of riches. Its lighter weight suggests that Onkyo is exchanging a bit of power-supply copper for silicon-based features, most obviously the seven HDMI inputs (one on the front panel!) and dual outputs, all in the gloriously 3D-capable version v1.4 being more or less forced on all manufacturers by the 3D police.
SETUP
Visually, the TX-NR1008 is indistinguishable from the model it replaces, at least on the outside. But upon con- necting my tangle of HDMI cables, audio and video in- terconnects, and speaker wires and then powering up, I observed a subtly updated GUI, with new, translucent overlays and menus as well as readouts that, while slightly more graphical than the previous generation’s, remain mostly text-driven, straightforward, and logical…
Click here to view the full article
http://www.soundandvisionmag.com/3d/2010/12/test-report-onkyo-tx-nr1008-av-receiver