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NAD receiver died - Printable Version

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NAD receiver died - abevilac - 07-24-2006

The NAD we received as a wedding present 18 yrs ago just died. I am at a loss to know what to replace it with. We are not audiophiles; I input all of our CDs [about 300] into iTunes and we were running them via a grape iMac to Airport Express to the receiver. It worked fine. I see where there are some receivers [a Pioneer 700 watt 7.1 channel for example] that has something that "improves sound quality for compressed music files." Should I be looking only for that??? Most of the receivers don't mention MP3s at all. Oh, we'd be ok spending up to $500. Thanks for any suggestions.


Re: NAD receiver died - Seacrest - 07-24-2006

I think those Pioneers only process WMA files.
That's what they seem to tout, anyway.
Once I saw WMA, I tuned out the rest of their mktg spiel.

Most receivers in that price range are probably decent enough.
Although, if you don't watch DVDs through that system, it might be more cost-effective to get a 'better' so-called 'esoteric*' stereo receiver for the same $$ rather than 7.1.


* Do they still use that term in HiFi?


Re: NAD receiver died - Spiff - 07-24-2006

Yup. Most music does not use surround sound. It is still stereo (with few exceptions, such as superaudio CDs, which are far and few between).

Therefore, get a better receiver for your buck if you will not be watching DVDs/movies (audio) through your amp/receiver. Stereo (2 channel, or 2.1 if you count the subwoofer) is still great for most people.

Can't say much for the improving compressed music. Kinda hard to improve on something that ain't there. (i.e. - digital zoom - never use it, or enhancing resolution - adding in pixels is a bad idea for the most part).


Re: NAD receiver died - elmo3 - 07-24-2006

You're probably better off buying a used piece of gear that was high end 5 or 10 years ago. You'll get a great piece of gear for a nice price.

A friend just gave me a new in the box refurbished Pioneer Elite VSX-97 receiver. That's right, he got it and never took it out of the box. Now he doesn't need it. I'm happy to work with a great piece like that.


Re: NAD receiver died - mick e - 07-24-2006

Have you looked into repairing the unit? High-end gear like NAD is usually worth fixing.


Re: NAD receiver died - N-OS X-tasy! - 07-24-2006

Ditto what mick e said. Although NAD stuff has always been considered budget audiophile and not true high-end, it's definitely worth looking into repairing it.


Re: NAD receiver died - abevilac - 07-24-2006

I had it cleaned about 5 years ago to fix a scratchy sound on the volume and I thought it might be time for a new unit. I didn't realize the thing about surround sound is really only for dvds. [like I said, we're not speaker heads!] Maybe I will look into getting it fixed again. Thanks.


Re: NAD receiver died - maurycy - 07-24-2006

I had a 5.1 system and then "downgraded" to 2.1. Now, I wouldn't go back. I mostly listen to music so for me home theater system was just a bad choice. I did not even have the rear surround speakers connected most of the time. I wrote "downgraded" because I went from 6 speakers to 3 but the sound quality went up from 3 to 6 Smile I would highly recommend fixing the NAD receiver or getting a new/used one that's a true stereo receiver.


Re: NAD receiver died - Seacrest - 07-24-2006

"A good receiver has a series of TUBES!!!"


Re: NAD receiver died - N-OS X-tasy! - 07-25-2006

[quote maurycy]I had a 5.1 system and then "downgraded" to 2.1.
No such thing as a "2.1" receiver.