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  1. #1

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    Default please critique my home theater selections...........

    Hey all. I'm in the process of researching for a home theater in my living room. On the audio side I am leaning toward this setup:

    Reciever: ONKYO TX-SR875

    Fronts: Polk RTi8's

    Center: Polk CSi3

    Surrounds & Rear Surrounds: Polk TC615i in walls

    I have limited space to the sides and rear of my sitting positions, so in walls are going to be a must. I am on a budget, so I thought spending my money on a good receiver, fronts and center I will see the biggest return. Plus, if I ever move I have a really good system to build off of........in walls are not my first choice, I would much rather go with RTi4's for the surrounds but - what else can I do. Any tips or suggestions are welcome. Thanks guys.

  2. #2

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    Not sure if this will help, but just in case . . . .

    I just put a surround in-wall / in-ceiling system in my family room, so not a "real" HT per say. I had some sitting position limitations: my couch is right up against the back wall, so in-wall rears would not work; you would not hear the (rear) L/R dispersion and the speakers would simply be way too close. So I went with in-ceiling speakers for the rear, and they work well.

    I used the LC80i's for the in-ceiling rears, (it's a 5.1 system), and I'm quite happy with them. I believe there is a TC80i series that would work for you equally as well if you decide on in-ceiling rears.

    The ceiling location works well - right above the sitting positions at the ends of the couch. I have the LC265i's for Front L/R, and upgraded to a LCi-RTS-C for the center. DSW-500 sub. I love it.

    Regards.
    Last edited by skykeys; 03-20-2008 at 02:05 PM.

  3. #3

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    I'd look at something other than Onkyo with the RT series speakers. Personally I find that combo to be a tad too much on the bright side. I'd look at something along the lines of an HK or Denon, or maybe Outlaw Audio or NAD depending on how much you have to spend.
    Main HT
    Magnepan 1.6QR fronts, PSB Image B4 surrounds, Pioneer SC-25, Parasound Halo A23, Oppo BDP-83 SE, Airport Express w/ Peachtree DAC, Sony KDL-55HX850, Sony PS3, Apple TV

    Bedroom System
    Polk Blackstone TL3, Polk PSWi225 Wireless Sub, HK 3490 Integrated, Oppo BDP-83, Sharp Aquos 32" TV, Apple TV

    Office Rig
    27" iMac w/Amarra, Peachtree DAC-IT, Focal XS Book, Schiit Valhalla > Sennheiser HD600, Schiit Lyr > HiFiMan HE0500, LG 47LM7600, Sony PS3, XBOX 360, Apple TV

  4. #4

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    22 people looked at this and only 1 reply?

  5. #5

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    2...replies
    Main HT
    Magnepan 1.6QR fronts, PSB Image B4 surrounds, Pioneer SC-25, Parasound Halo A23, Oppo BDP-83 SE, Airport Express w/ Peachtree DAC, Sony KDL-55HX850, Sony PS3, Apple TV

    Bedroom System
    Polk Blackstone TL3, Polk PSWi225 Wireless Sub, HK 3490 Integrated, Oppo BDP-83, Sharp Aquos 32" TV, Apple TV

    Office Rig
    27" iMac w/Amarra, Peachtree DAC-IT, Focal XS Book, Schiit Valhalla > Sennheiser HD600, Schiit Lyr > HiFiMan HE0500, LG 47LM7600, Sony PS3, XBOX 360, Apple TV

  6. #6

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    A lot of people like to read and do not have enough knowledge yet to post anything you would find helpful. Me being one of them.
    7.1 HOME THEATER:
    Center: CSi3
    Front: RTi10
    Surround: RTi A3
    Rear Surround: RTi4
    Subwoofer: Mirage Omni S10
    TV: Sharp Aquos 42" 1080p LCD
    Receiver: Onkyo TX-SR805
    Blu-Ray Player / CD Player / DVD Player / Media Server / Game Console / Best money I've ever spent: 60GB PS3

  7. #7

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    If you're on a budget, I would suggest trying the used market before buying new. Do you need HDMI switching? Are you going to listen to music?

    Hard to critique that selection, it's pretty solid. I don't know if the Onkyo is bright but if it is like Danny (Polkmaniac) said, I would look for something else instead. Yamaha is another bright brand, at least it used to be, so a Denon or Harman Kardon perhaps. Something like the HK 2xx series is a solid receiver and doesn't cost too much, plus it has preouts for external amp for future upgrade.

  8. #8

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    If I could find the room for a floor standing speaker for surrounds....and I went the 5.1 route to save some $.......could I use a pair of Monitor 50's for surround speaker with the above stuff?

  9. #9

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    Welcome Burnout.

    The Monitors are a different series & not timbre matched to the RTI's. If you can listen to the RTi's with the 875, you will be able to tell if it is too bright a combination. Otherwise, you picked some fine equipment.
    Sunfire TGP III PrePro, Sunfire Cinema Grand Signature 405wpc 5 ch. Amp, Rotel RCD-1072 CDP, Onkyo TA2600 Tape Deck, Pioneer Elite 47-A DVD, Sony 32" XBR TV, Polk RTA-8T Main Speakers, Boston VR-920 Center Channel, Boston PV-600 Subwoofer, Polk DSW 400 Subwoofer, Polk FXi-3 Surround Speakers

  10. #10

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    I would not use towers as surrounds. Bookshelves are good as they need to be above ear levels for optimum surround effect.

    http://www.audioholics.com/tweaks/sp...ssential-guide

  11. #11

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    If you can buy a CSi5 and have the space for it, generally it's recommended over the 3. The 3 is good though.

    Check the used market. Sometimes there are good deals. I watched an auction end last night with no bids on a used demo CSi5 and RTi6's for about $480 shipped. I think it's because people

    Look at FXi's for surrounds as well. They may fill the space better than bookshelves.

    Don't forget the sub. It will be required for action movies. And don't forget to put aside some money for cables. They can add up.

  12. #12

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    so I thought spending my money on a good receiver, fronts and center I will see the biggest return
    Your thinking here is on the money.

    If you want to save some bucks... You might want to consider Onk's 805 instead of the 875. You'd lose:
    One HDMI (this could be a deal breaker for you) but if your the sort who only connects Cable & a DVD player it's a non-issue.
    10 watts power ( neglible difference)
    And PERHAPS a biggie to you: Reon video processing. I can't comment on the quality or value of this - some seem thrilled, others find it troublesome: read up on it at avsforum if you wish...

    If the Reon or HDMI matters to you, stick with 875 otherwise the 805 could save you BIG bucks.

  13. #13

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    I have tc80i as surrounds and tc620i as back surrounds before this I had the rti4 as surrounds and i prefer the tc80i as a surround speaker. They are matched up with rti12 as fronts and a pioneer elite 81txv. Not to bright in my opinion and the stealth install is professional looking.

  14. #14

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    Very close to my setup (I have the 805 not the 875) and I absolutely love it! Good buys man!

  15. #15

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    Quote Originally Posted by Polkmaniac View Post
    I'd look at something other than Onkyo with the RT series speakers. Personally I find that combo to be a tad too much on the bright side. I'd look at something along the lines of an HK or Denon, or maybe Outlaw Audio or NAD depending on how much you have to spend.
    I 2nd this opinion.

    engtaz
    engtaz

    I love how music can brighten up a bad day.

  16. #16

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    Guys, I value your opinions as far as receivers go, but as far as I can tell the ONKYO is tops for features for the price. I would LOVE to spend less on a receiver, but the things I am looking for are:

    - HDMI switching so I can hook everything up with 1 cable to the receiver, then 1 cable to the display.....I HATE SPAGHETTI!!!

    - TrueHD / DTS decoding for Blue Ray / HDDVD

    - at least 3 HDMI in ports

    Before I thought about the sr875 I was looking at the sr705. It is WAY less and does all of the above, however....I was also looking at a 50" 720P plasma. The 720P upscaling of the SR705 would have suited me perfect, but now I am re-thinking the 50". My seating position is going to be between 7-8 feet away from the screen, and at that distance I"m worried about the picture quality on a 720p 50". I have since given more thought to a 42", namely the Panasonic TH-42P700u. It is a 1080P set and I figure I will need full 1080P upconversion of video, hence the SR875. Would I be better off with the Monitor series for use with the ONKYO? Here is a possible layout for my living room home theater using towers for fronts and fxi's for surrounds in a 5.1 setup:





    After more research last night, I came across the Polk FXi speakers. I like the idea, but I have a question......if you look at the pics above, the speaker on the left wall would be firing backwards, but there is no wall there to bounce the sound back towards the seating position like there is on the other side.....with this rule out using the FXi's?
    Last edited by burnout42; 03-21-2008 at 10:55 AM.

  17. #17

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    Well if you look at my signature you will see that I am using orb audio mod 2's as my surrounds to make a 6.1 system. I, like you was reluctant to buy an in wall speaker to make my 5.1 into a 6.1 due to knowing that I would be moving soon in a few years and wanting to take my speaker investments with me. Prior to this I had a 5.1 system using polk Rti's as surrounds.
    I am also using an in wall as my center but constructed a box for it to make it an on wall.
    I also have an Onkyo 905 and all I can say is definitely run the Audessy. After I had installed the Orbs, i messed with the speaker calibration manually and felt like i may have made a mistake in choosing the orbs. However, I finally had time last night to rerun the Audessy with the new orb speakers and WOW! It really makes a difference. The speakers fit seamlessly together and sound amazing! I know the tweeters are different than the Lsi's but damn if i can tell with real listening tests.
    Just get the Onkyo in whatever you choose to get. The Audessy is worth the price.
    Samsung hps 5053
    Onkyo 905
    Xbox 360 Elite with HD-DVD player
    PS3 with 60g HD
    Oppo 970HD DVD player
    Toshiba A35
    panasonic BD30
    Dell XPS M1210 via vga and spdif
    Direct TV HD receiver
    LSI 15 fronts
    Lc265i center
    Orb audio Mod2 surrounds for 6.1
    Outlaw LFM-1 Plus subwoofer

  18. #18

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    I was curious about the Onkyo, having read several posts in this forum. People seem to like the brand here. So I did some research. While still generally favorable, there are a few negative comments that are probably worth checking. These are from Amazon.

    http://www.amazon.com/review/product...R2R2DFCV9UJTLS

    The fact that the Onkyo runs really hot is a concern for me personally. I currently have a Yamaha RX-V620, a middle of the road model (from 7 years ago). I like it a lot, and I have never had a problem with it. Per my previous post - I've recently upgraded my speakers (as part of a family room remodeling project) and went with in-walls, so the receiver is driving LC265i fronts, LCi-RTS-c center, and LC80i rears. The receiver handles them just fine.

    I suggest at least checking out the new Yamaha RX-V663 or V863, among other models. If I ever get around to upgrading my receiver, which probably won't happen for a while, I will seriously consider the V663 or V863 - as my budget allows. :)

    Regards, and good luck.
    Last edited by skykeys; 03-21-2008 at 12:40 PM.

  19. #19

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    check my sig. the only complaints i have are a few lip sync issues. most don't notice them. the 805 and rti combo was too bright...until i ran the audyssey.

    POLK SDA-SRS 1.2TL -- ADCOM GFA-5802
    PANASONIC PT-AE4000U -- DIY WILSONART DW 135" 2.35:1 SCREEN
    ONKYO TX-SR805
    CENTER: CSI5
    MAINS: RTI8'S
    SURROUNDS: RTI8'S
    7.1 SURROUNDS: RTI6'S
    SUB: SVS PB12-PLUS/2 (12.3 series)

    XBOX 360
    WiiPS3/blu-rayTOSHIBA HD-A35 hd dvd

    http://polkarmy.com/forums/index.php

    Quote Originally Posted by bobman1235
    I have no facts to back that up, but I never let facts get in the way of my arguments.

  20. #20

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    I have never been a big fan of Onkyo products, but that's just a matter of taste more than anything (i.e., I don't like the style, look, layout, usage, remotes, etc.).

  21. #21

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    Burnout42: ...but as far as I can tell the ONKYO is tops for features for the price
    Burnout: you're totally correct about this.. Think you'll also find Onkyo's setup, interface etc excels.
    You were wise going with 805/875: you may not have noticed but the 805/875 have Burr Brown DAC's (not so on the 705) --- just one of those little details that often don't show up in comparison charts. (I wish I'd gone to 805 or 875 to start).

    The downside to the Onkyos (805/875) is that they run hot, are huge (will need mucho room), some seem to have lip sync issues (worse? than other brands.)

  22. #22

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    Just my opinion but I would spend more on the speakers than the receiver. I would adjust your ratio. I would jumo up to the RTi10, or 12's, maybe even something from the LSi series and spend much less on the receiver. I have seen the 805 for around $600. I prefer Harman Kardon. You could pick up something like the avr-247 and upgrade the speaker choices...

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