Home » Electronic » Review: Yamaha RX-V3900BL 7.1-Channel Network Home Theater Receiver

Review: Yamaha RX-V3900BL 7.1-Channel Network Home Theater Receiver

spd_2009071204749_b

Yamaha RX-V3900BL 7.1-Channel Network Home Theater Receiver offers an unprecedented versatility with access to sources of today’s hottest music including Internet Radio, Rhapsody online music service, music streaming from PC, HD Radio with iTunes tagging, XM and Sirius Satellite Radio ready, USB, iPod and Bluetooth compatibility, and extensive multi-zone custom installation and convenience features, plus Web Browser Control.

Yamaha RX-V3900BL has an integrated web server that offers a simple and intuitive solution for monitoring the area for use in a home network. To use this feature, simply connect the receiver to a local network and enter the IP address of the unit from a web browser on a computer, a touch panel controller, or even a PDA. The browser will display the top menu, allowing control on / off, volume and other settings for all zones. It also allows access to pages of detailed metadata area with HD Radio, Internet radio, iPod, XM / SIRIUS or PC music files. Using this powerful feature, multi-zone settings is no longer a time consuming task.

The RX-V3900BL processing features surround sound with an enhanced ability to 3D cinema DSP. By using two presence speakers in addition to the four FL / FR and SL / SR speakers, the sound field is given an extra vertical dimension. Pressing the 3D DSP button provides a sound field that expands upward and downward. Hi-Fi DSP programs sound more natural, closer to the feeling of actually being in a concert hall with a cathedral ceiling or a small house where he lives the sound seems to bounce up from the ground. Cinema DSP programs have an added dimension of height that was previously difficult to achieve at the sounds coming from above have precise location. When the volume is low, CINEMA DSP effects may be difficult to hear. Adaptive DSP Level overcomes this problem by assessing the difference between the volume level and a reference level, and adjusting the DSP level to ensure optimal efficiency, ie the best possible sound.

Share This Post:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • BlinkList
  • email
  • MSN Reporter
  • MySpace
  • PDF
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • Twitter
Tags: ,

Leave a comment