| Brand Name: | Yamaha |
| Brand Name: | Yamaha |
Product Details
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The HTR-5540 is a powerful and versatile five-channel receiver, delivering 75 watts to each channel. The receiver provides plenty of processing, including Dolby Digital, Dolby ProLogic II, and DTS digital surround decoding. Yamaha's Quad-Field CINEMA DSP allows enjoyment of Dolby Digital EX and DTS-ES Matrix 6.1 sound formats in the Phantom mode (using 5.1 channels). The HTR-5550 provides 21 surround programs and offers 41 proprietary surround-environment variations. Eager to take on home theater responsibilities, the HTR-5540 has four component-video inputs and one video output. The HTR-5540 has two audio-only inputs and one audio-only output. Including the audio portion of audio-video source inputs, the receiver provides one optical and one coaxial digital-audio input. The rear panel also has input jacks for an external surround-sound decoder.
The six-speaker complement includes the five-speaker NS-AP280A for the front, center, and surround speakers, and Yamaha's YST-SW005 subwoofer for deep bass, which is important for effective home theater. Each magnetically shielded speaker in the NS-AP280A ensemble is a two-way acoustic-suspension speaker using a three-inch woofer and a .5-inch dome tweeter. The YHT-300 system owes much of its deep bass output to the YST-SW005's Active Servo Technology. The sub features a 6.5-inch driver and a 55-watt amplifier to deliver the necessary sonic punch. A volume control and two-position high-cut filter help ensure a seamless transition from the subwoofer to any existing full-range speakers. All speakers included in the YHT-900 have magnetic shielding, so they can be placed near a TV or monitor without causing picture degradation.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
49 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rich, clear and deep listening experience.,
By "asifanwar" (Alexandria, VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Yamaha YHT-300 5.1-Channel Home Theater System (Electronics)
Yamaha YHT 300 system is great. The HTR-5540 receiver has 6.1 Matrix (virtual not discrete), which means it will give rear center speaker effects virtually. The receiver has Quad-Field Cinema DSP, Virtual Cinema DSP and Silent Cinema features. Does not have S-video or component video. (Connect your DVD player directly to TV's component/s-video video inputs.) This receiver gives you inputs for DVD-Audio and SACD. Front, Surround and Center speakers are average. Do not be bothered by 75x5 watts, this is more than enough for your medium sized living room.The best thing about this package is its 55 watts Advanced-YST Active Servo sub-woofer. Before that I bought the sony 100 watts sub but the Yamaha 55 watts, which comes with yht-300, has way too deep and rich bass. The sub-woofer has two inputs on the back, L(eft) and R(ight/MONO) if your receiver has split sub-outputs (connect to MONO input if you have one sub output). Sub also has speaker outputs. All in all, I am having an excellent experience. Hookup is easy. Along with the receiver manual, there is a hook-up booklet, 100 ft good quality speaker wire (low quality speaker wire came with sony set). I highly recommend this system if you are in this price range...
36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
lots of features for the price - five star value,
By +++ (OR, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Yamaha YHT-300 5.1-Channel Home Theater System (Electronics)
Before I bought this system, I went to a store and played with several home theaters all in the same price range as this Yamaha. I liked its sound more that that of Sony and Kenwood, although it was hard to make a good judgement in a noisy environment. Two weeks after I bought it, I am quite happy with the purchase. The included main, center, and rear two-way speakers are quite small and inobtrusive-looking. The sound quality should be judged separately for movies and for CD music. Indeed, the movie sound consists mainly of conversation and some ambient noises, sound effects, and background music, which do not require too much from the sound system. I am totally satisfied with the sound quality when watching the movies. The sound is clear, and the bass is as powerful as one can possibly need. Playing more demanding music, such as classical CDs, reveals that the sound lacks transparency and depth, particularly when you listen to the music loudly, as it would sound in a symphony hall. I would blame it primarily on low-end speakers. Of course, one should realize that a pair of good speakers designed for high fidelity sound reproduction usually costs more than this whole system including the receiver and the subwoofer. Unlike the speakers, the receiver has very good parameters (0.06% THD at 75 W per channel, frequency response from 10 Hz to 100 kHz at -3 dB , and 100 dB signal to noise ratio) and an excellent selection of decoders: Dolby Pro Logic (to decode Dolby Surround used on VHS tapes, TV broadcast, and digital cable (left, center, right, and one rear channels)), Dolby Pro Logic II (advanced version of Dolby Pro Logic which can create a quasi-5-channel sound from Dolby Surround and create an illusion of surround sound from standard stereo audio tracks), as well as Dolby Digital and DTS (two competiting technologies to record 5 channels of sound plus a low frequency effects channel, therefore labelled 5.1). Additionally, it has a variety of "sound fields" which essentially are the sound reflections in big theaters or cinemas imitated by delaying the signal in selected speakers by several milliseconds. The headphone jack works well. I tested it with my Sennheiser HD600 headphones and found the sound quality to be slightly worse, but close to what I get from a dedicated Creek headphone amplifier. Most functions can be controlled both from the remote and using the buttons on the reciever's faceplate. The number of inputs and outputs is adequate, you can connect 6 audio analog and 2 audio digital sources. The receiver also can redirect the video signal from cable converter or VHS (or DVD player if you do not use component connection) to the TV simultaneously with switching the audio source. The things that I am unhappy about are minor, but are worth mentioning. First of all, the accessories included with YHT-300 are not sufficient even to try the system out. For instance, a mono audio cable required to connect the receiver to the subwoofer is not included. Likewise, there is no optical or digial coaxial cable in the package which is required to get dolby digital or DTS 5.1 surrounding sound signal from the DVD player (this sound encoding is not transmitted over a regular video-audio RCA cable). Instead, Yamaha included an EXTENSION (male on one end, female on the other) RCA cable - I am still guessing what use it was intended for. The second thing to mention is that the manual could have been written a lot better. Even with my technical background it took me several readings to understand what all these buttons on the remote do. Overall, it is a very decent system (excellent for the movies, more or less OK to play CDs) and a good value for the price.
20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
YHT300,
By "darkstar1011" (Ludlow, Vermont United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Yamaha YHT-300 5.1-Channel Home Theater System (Electronics)
This is probably the best entry level setupyou can buy.Not the most powerful but without a doubt the most feature packed and versitile. First of all the sub is a 60 watt not 55 watt. It clearly states 60 watts on the back of the sub and I haven't found anything in the manual to indicate otherwise.Yeah you can get a 5 or 600 watt system for the same price but you'll only be getting just that...A few more watts. If you think Sony or Kenwood is gonna give you a richer,better sound,forget it.Yamaha makes top notch audio equipment.Contrary to one of the reviews I read,you most certainly can acheive true 6.1 by hooking an external decoder to the 6.1 channel inputs.Jesus,do the research before you go spoutin' off.Need a bigger sub to stroke your ego,get one,Yamaha makes'em up to 150 watts.No component vi- deo out's but you don't need them on a receiver! It would have put this system over $400 to add component video out's. As long as your dvd and t.v. has them you're all set. They also have systems all the way up to 870 watts and 192khz.As far as the speakers go,they're good speakers. They're not going to box these things up with a $1000 speaker set,think about it,if you've got the money you can hook up whatever speakers you want.This is a better than average setup and worth every penny,Yamaha is the poor man's Bose,no doubt about it!
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