Flrnlamb, I'm no techie, and I respect your experience and knowledge. I come from the high end audio world and up until last winter I would have totally agreed with you about seperates. I generally still do.
But have you actually HEARD the AVR300?
I'm tellin' ya, after auditioning it, the AVR300 is a different animal from your typical HT receiver. It's by far the best HTR I've heard and it really does approach the performance of separates IMHO. It's a whole 'nother league better than the AVR200 and in a completely different universe from the AVR100.
I thought the pre-pro section of the 300 was a real honey, worth the price for that alone. I don't know precisely how Arcam separated the power supplies, isolated noise or what other voodoo they worked, but the amps in the 300 are much better sounding than the 200. Unless you have thirsty, current hogging speakers, I think the AVR300 sounds much better than any other solution I've heard near its street price ($1600-1700) - and that includes the medium priced separates I auditioned (Rotel, B&K, Parasound, and Anthem).
I found the AVR 300 to be very spacious, resolving and dynamic with reasonable speakers, and this is from someone who usually hates music through receivers of any sort. (I'm used to listening to music through full range Alons Vs with 6K mono amps and a 4K preamp). No hardness, no glare, no congestion. In fact, the 300 has an ease and openness that's very appealing.
Music reproduction is where the Arcam outshines other HT receivers and modest separates. The AVR300 doesn't come close to beating my 2 channel system electronics, but my gear cost six times as much - it should sound better! Yet music is very enjoyable through the Arcam - you don't think about what you're missing while listening through it.
IMO the AVR300 is an excellent solution for music lovers getting into HT and HT fans who also want good sound for music. It offers genuine value for the money. They can always use the 300 as a pre/pro and add an outboard multichannel amp as their systems grow. A lot will depend on their speaker demands and room size.
Does the AVR300 surpass the top of the line Lexicons, Krells, Carys, et al? No, but it costs thousands less and for many people, this is as much amp and pre-pro as they'll ever need.
But have you actually HEARD the AVR300?
I'm tellin' ya, after auditioning it, the AVR300 is a different animal from your typical HT receiver. It's by far the best HTR I've heard and it really does approach the performance of separates IMHO. It's a whole 'nother league better than the AVR200 and in a completely different universe from the AVR100.
I thought the pre-pro section of the 300 was a real honey, worth the price for that alone. I don't know precisely how Arcam separated the power supplies, isolated noise or what other voodoo they worked, but the amps in the 300 are much better sounding than the 200. Unless you have thirsty, current hogging speakers, I think the AVR300 sounds much better than any other solution I've heard near its street price ($1600-1700) - and that includes the medium priced separates I auditioned (Rotel, B&K, Parasound, and Anthem).
I found the AVR 300 to be very spacious, resolving and dynamic with reasonable speakers, and this is from someone who usually hates music through receivers of any sort. (I'm used to listening to music through full range Alons Vs with 6K mono amps and a 4K preamp). No hardness, no glare, no congestion. In fact, the 300 has an ease and openness that's very appealing.
Music reproduction is where the Arcam outshines other HT receivers and modest separates. The AVR300 doesn't come close to beating my 2 channel system electronics, but my gear cost six times as much - it should sound better! Yet music is very enjoyable through the Arcam - you don't think about what you're missing while listening through it.
IMO the AVR300 is an excellent solution for music lovers getting into HT and HT fans who also want good sound for music. It offers genuine value for the money. They can always use the 300 as a pre/pro and add an outboard multichannel amp as their systems grow. A lot will depend on their speaker demands and room size.
Does the AVR300 surpass the top of the line Lexicons, Krells, Carys, et al? No, but it costs thousands less and for many people, this is as much amp and pre-pro as they'll ever need.