You might also check out a used Meridian 565 and 562. These components work together and I don't think you can find any fault with sound quality for either music or movies. Meridian has a reputation in both home theater and music that places them in the upper echelons.
These two pieces, when configured, act as one. The 562 takes all your sources, whether digital or analog, converts them to digital, sends it all with one SPDIF connection to the 565, which then handles all processing, etc.
There are versions 1,2 and 3 of the 562v. Version 3 has two component video inputs/one output. The lower versions are limited to S-Video. I have a version 1, and don't even use the video switching--I just let me tv do that part. The 562 provides something like 8 analog inputs, four SPDIF and two toslink, so you cal hook up a lot of gear.
In addition to what you'd expect for HT processing, the 565 has a "Direct" mode as well as some surprisingly nice processing modes for music, like Trifield and Super Stereo. Unlike the cheesy "echo and delay" soundfields that the mid-fi market seems to favor, these really sound great, especially with lower quality source material like early era CDs, XM or Sirius. If you do go this route, you want to get a 565 with software version 6.2 which includes DTS, etc. It has eight channels of analog output to support 7.1 systems.
However, the Meridian gear is black and a pain to set up. Nevertheless, once dialed in, it's excellent. Awesome flexibility.
These two pieces, when configured, act as one. The 562 takes all your sources, whether digital or analog, converts them to digital, sends it all with one SPDIF connection to the 565, which then handles all processing, etc.
There are versions 1,2 and 3 of the 562v. Version 3 has two component video inputs/one output. The lower versions are limited to S-Video. I have a version 1, and don't even use the video switching--I just let me tv do that part. The 562 provides something like 8 analog inputs, four SPDIF and two toslink, so you cal hook up a lot of gear.
In addition to what you'd expect for HT processing, the 565 has a "Direct" mode as well as some surprisingly nice processing modes for music, like Trifield and Super Stereo. Unlike the cheesy "echo and delay" soundfields that the mid-fi market seems to favor, these really sound great, especially with lower quality source material like early era CDs, XM or Sirius. If you do go this route, you want to get a 565 with software version 6.2 which includes DTS, etc. It has eight channels of analog output to support 7.1 systems.
However, the Meridian gear is black and a pain to set up. Nevertheless, once dialed in, it's excellent. Awesome flexibility.