- Joined: July 2003
- Location: Lacombe, AB
- Post Count: 2,561
My current receiver is almost 10 years old, Dolby Digital only, and has one optical and two coax digital inputs and no analog inputs. My Toshiba HD A30 is currently plugged into my optical input, so no spare optical for a PS3. I want to upgrade my receiver before plunking down the cash for either a PS3 or a Panasonic DMP BD50. Can anyone suggest what I should be looking at in receiver specs? I don't want to lay down a pile of cash for a new receiver only to find out that it won't play audio decoded inboard by my players.
\"My opinion is that (a) anyone who actually works in a video store and does not understand letterboxing has given up on life, and (b) any customer who prefers to have the sides of a movie hacked off should not be licensed to operate a video player.\"-- Roger Ebert
- Joined: August 2001
- Location: New York City Area
- Post Count: 3,531
Re: What should I be looking for in an HDMI receiver
IIRC, you may want decoding on the player side in part because the PiP capability needs to handle 2 separate audio streams which might not be possible (at least for now?) when bitstreaming via HDMI. I could be wrong on this -- and someone will probably correct me, if I am.
If you're thinking you don't care about any PiP features, you might want to reconsider because some future implementation of stereoscopic 3D on Blu-ray may very need this. Of course, they might only put the audio on just the one/primary stream, not both, but why risk it, if you don't need to?
So yes, ideally, you should get *both* a player that decodes all formats as well as a receiver that handles all formats, if you're concerned about futureproofing your purchases.
_Man_
Just another amateur learning to paint w/ "the light of the world".
- Joined: July 2003
- Location: Lacombe, AB
- Post Count: 2,561
Re: What should I be looking for in an HDMI receiver
Thanks for the insight, guys. I was already leaning towards Onkyo.
\"My opinion is that (a) anyone who actually works in a video store and does not understand letterboxing has given up on life, and (b) any customer who prefers to have the sides of a movie hacked off should not be licensed to operate a video player.\"-- Roger Ebert