The Outlaw 976 actually shoots higher than the price, in my opinion. It uses linear power supply. Has very good op amp circuits and LOTS of localized power supply capacitors surrounding the opamps. The XLR output stage is fully balanced/differential. It has a pretty good fullness of sound and the audio actually sounds very natural. It doesn't have the best high frequency response and the bass is not the strongest, but it's probably close to the sound quality of a Marantz AV7703 in my opinion. The Marantz has this thing beat, though, because Marantz has much better power supply and audio circuits.
I actually completely rebuilt a 976 for a friend, upgrading critical op amps for left/center/right/sub as well as completely re-capping the entire audio boards. Replaced all op amps on the XLR output board as well. Probably about 140 total parts.
It is engineered to be a low price product and it shows with the user interface. It's cumbersome because it blanks out the screen completely for a couple seconds when you go into the menu. I think it treats the "menu" as a different source. The menu does not overlay the current video like most other processors. But it is functional and it works. Has a fully parametric EQ - you can dial in exact frequencies. No automatic room correction (if that matters to you).
I actually completely rebuilt a 976 for a friend, upgrading critical op amps for left/center/right/sub as well as completely re-capping the entire audio boards. Replaced all op amps on the XLR output board as well. Probably about 140 total parts.
It is engineered to be a low price product and it shows with the user interface. It's cumbersome because it blanks out the screen completely for a couple seconds when you go into the menu. I think it treats the "menu" as a different source. The menu does not overlay the current video like most other processors. But it is functional and it works. Has a fully parametric EQ - you can dial in exact frequencies. No automatic room correction (if that matters to you).