6/10/2012

JVC RX-9000VBK Dolby Digital/DTS Audio/Video Receiver Review

JVC RX-9000VBK Dolby Digital/DTS Audio/Video Receiver
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The JVC RX-9000VBK is apparently JVCs flagship reciever, and while it is a nice reciever, it does not present itself as boldly as some of JVCs other flagship equipment. This receiver is big and complicated, so I will try to divide it up into the different aspects that I feel are important for a reciever to have.
Frist and foremost, this is a reciever, so lets look at audio quality. I have hooked this unit up to a seven piece two-thousand dollar THX Technics speaker system, and it has very nice sound. Because this particular system has two active subwoofers (a left and a right one), I found the Subwoofer level adjustment a godsend. All of the speakers had individual level adjustment (less the mains which had balance control), which is very nice. The noise level is as it should be in any reciever in this class, non-existant. The unit has many audio inputs: One COAX PCM [or SPDI/F], three optical TOS-LINK, and 3 sets of standard analouge connectors. This does not include any of the sets that are coupled with video. The optical and coax digital inputs are software routable, which is good. The unit does have sub-room output with a second set of stereo speakers as an option, but I will not be using this setup. I also found the DSP effects to be genuinely lowsey. The Pro-Logic mode is VERY quiet and VERY noisy, and the other modes don't do much for me. The built in 3-band EQ on the other hand, I find quite useful, but 5 band would have made me like it a little more.
Next video and the like. The unit has inputs for DVD, TV, an I/O for VCR, also a front video input jack and in addition a VCR2 that is virtually useless. All of the inputs except VCR2 support both S-Video and Composite. Here is one spot where the unit looses points. The S-Video and Composite video are on seperate busses in the unit, i.e. if you have a video camera the uses composite video, all your output devices need to be wired for composite video. Its utterly redicilous. In addition, what is the point of a second VCR connector that has only composite video in? There is none. Very disapointing.
With DVD input you have four ways to connect your audio, you can use Coaxial Digial, Optical Digital, 2-Channel Stereo, and a 6-channel descrete mode with inputs for each of Center, Sub, Left and Right, and Rear Left and Right. I myself could not get my JVC DVD Player to send 5.1 Channel audio over optical and have my JVC Reciever recieve it, so I'm stuck with the 6-channel mode. I am still discussing this issue with JVC, but this is also disapointing that there seems to be prodcut compatibility issues between the same brand.
The unit does have an optical digial out, a feature I'm not using now, but mabye I will some time in the future. Its nice to have there.
Of corse there are AM and FM radio modes, but I don't have an antenna, so I don't get a single channel. Its probably a good tuner. I really don't know.
The manual is an abomination of technical writing. I recomend having a tech-savy friend help you install it rather than resorting to the manual. It only explains how to change settings without the remote, which leaves out the entire on-screen system. Thankfully, the design of the unit itself is good and relivelty easy to use, with a surprisingly small number of options.
The remote is well designed, but has no support for DVD players of any kind. This is unfortunate, because if not for that, I could have actually used one remote for the whole setup. JVC has invoatve technology called compu-link, and once you get by its primitive stages, its very impressive. All of the components in the system I was setting this up in (less the speakers which I've already mentioned) were JVC, a JVC D-Series 32" TV, an older (but still AWESOME) JVC-S9500U VCR, and a JVC BX2000 DVD Player. When you turn the reciever off, everything else shuts right down. When you power on the reciever and pick VCR, the VCR powers up. Good design here. JVC does include a remote sender to add a smiliar feature to non-jvc equipment, but it must be placed so that it can "see" all the other compoents, which can be very awakard. The switching can be annoying occasionally. Changing mixing modes on the DVD player often made the reciever switch to stereo analouge mode for DVDs insted of the 6 channel mode.
Its obvious that JVC still has alot of work to do in the reciever market. They should really invest more time into manual design. Also, at the retial price, its fairly expensive for what it does. If this unit were about $500, it would be a bargin.
The reason I bought this reciever is I thought it would impress me, and to be frank, it doesn't, but I'm not an easy person to please. I probably should have saved my money and bought a ONKYO TX-DS989 :)

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JVC takes the clean sound of Advanced Super A design to five channels in its flagship multiroom, multisource, audio/video control receiver, the RX-9000VBK. Advanced Super A design eliminates the crossover and switching distortion normally associated with high-efficiency class AB amplifiers.The RX-9000VBK, with built-in Dolby Digital and DTS decoding, is compatible with multichannel audio and has 5.1-channel analog inputs and five separate amplifiers. Tested under all conditions, the fully discrete 120-watt-per-channel (stereo) and 100-watt-per-channel (surround) amplifier section is FTC rated into either 8 ohms or 4 ohms.Built-in multiroom/multisource capabilities are conveniently controlled by an RF/infrared multibrand audio/video/cable/satellite remote unit. The RX-9000VBK can send different programs to separate locations--for example, video sound to the den while CD audio is playing in a bedroom. The remote also controls TV auto on, for use with any brand of TV and all JVC audio-video Compu Link one-touch home theater automation systems.JVC's RX-9000VBK has a multitude of video switching capabilities, with five video inputs (including four S-video) and four audio inputs. In addition, one coaxial and three optical digital audio inputs are assignable for digital satellite, CD, minidisc, and DVD as needed.
The digital inputs feed JVC's legendary K2 interface, which compensates for the inherent jitter and distortion found in digital information. The K2 interface completely re-creates the incoming digital signal before it reaches the digital-to-analog converter. This new exact copy allows the D/A converter to create a more expansive and resolute sound stage on all six channels: front right, center and left; rear left and right; and the ".1" subwoofer.The JVC RX-9000VBK has many ease-of-use features. Text Compu Link displays CD Text or programmed title information on the receiver's fluorescent display and multicolor onscreen display. Users can select and categorize titles via the onscreen display and remote and can see title information even when CD changers are placed out of sight.Other notable features include the 1-bit P.E.M. D.D. audio converter for all six channels and banana plug speaker terminals with five-way binding plugs for added integrity.

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