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YAMAHA RX-A4A AVENTAGE Receptor AV de 7.1 Canales con MusicCast

Envío gratis en pedidos superiores a Mex $600.00

Mex $31,693.53

Mex $ 1,881 .00 Mex $1,881.00

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  • HDMI con HDCP 2.3 y eARC (7 pulgadas o 3 salidas)
  • Entrada Phono
  • 4K60, 4K120, 8K60, HDR10plus y HDMI 2.1
  • Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, AirPlay 2 y Spotify Connect
  • Audio multihabitación MusicCast y MusicCast Surround capaz con altavoces envolventes inalámbricos MusicCast 20 o MusicCast 50;Alrededor: IA y AURO-3D;Dolby Atmos con virtualización de altura Dolby Atmos y DTS:X con CINEMA DSP HD3;Control de voz con Amazon Alexa, Siri (a través de AirPlay 2) y Google Assistant;Pandora, Spotify, Napster, SiriusXM, TIDAL, Deezer, Qobuz, Amazon Music HD;Controlador de control de terceros, fácil configuración IP y control remoto IP


Yamaha AVENTAGE RX-A4A Receptor AV de 7.1 canales con HDMI 8K y MusicCast.


Grant County Golfer
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 27 de marzo de 2025
It's a Yamaha, it just works. I've been buying Yamaha ever since getting burned by no less than 4 Onk0 products, one Integra and three Onkyos. HDMI boards in each went south.But enough of that, this is a Yamaha review after all. HDMI switching is as quick as you could want, sound quality is very good, and I have very revealing speakers with RAAL ribbon tweeters. I don't really care for the 24 or so sound effects stuff Yamaha includes in most or their AVRs, but it's no big deal since they don't get in the way of what I want, which is nice clean sound. And that is where this Yamaha shines.What I don't like is that great big volume knob on the front of this thing. Couldn't look more ridiculous if they had pasted a big red rubber clown nose on it! All to hide the fact that they cheaped out with that itty bitty display window that is difficult to read without binoculars!
John T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 12 de marzo de 2024
Right before the advent of HDMI into the zeitgeist of AV I upgraded my entire home theater. I got a multichannel DVD player that would also play SACD and DVD-Audio and a Pioneer Elite receiver that could use its mini-1394 interface. That mini-1394 interface kept me from upgrading for years. I just loved the sound of multichannel SACDs. Then Oppo came out with a multichannel universal player was a little out of reach. Then when I was about to pull the trigger on an Oppo they stopped making their AV components. Well a few years passed and things have changed a little. I still wish I could have gotten my hands on that Oppo unit.Then I bought this Yamaha receiver. One of the main reasons I purchased this unit was the ESS Sabre ES9007S DAC it had. I also had prior positive experiences with Yamaha receivers which helped too. But I first learned of the ESS Sabre DACs when drooling over Oppo components. This as a significant part of the Yamaha component has been amazing. It can play lossless files from my NAS, which has been glorious. And it even does a great job decoding my SACDs fed by my new Sony Universal player. I have also been blown away by how awesome the unit has made films. I viewed The Green Knight, and Dune in the past week and it was incredible. Does a great job processing the Atmos soundtracks into an encompassing experience. I really wished I had made this switch sooner, but it always seemed that my requirements for price and features just wasn't there. But now I couldn't be happier with my home theater's sound.
Customer
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de diciembre de 2024
I cannot think of anything I dislike yet. I have a 1-off configuration as I have rear speakers but they are 3-times further than a normal 7.1 setup. This lets me set the speaker distance for a REALLY great sound. I also have other oddities where changing the output dB on one side makes all the difference.I am still trying to sort out how to connect and control multiple media players to the HDMI Arc. Right now is keeps reverting to my Blu-Ray
AiranR
Comentado en México el 10 de septiembre de 2024
Acabo de recibir este AVR después de estarlo cazando unos cuantos años. Lo tengo conectado a un par de bocinas ELAC y unas Polk para Surround así como un canal central Pioneer y un sub Onkyo.Tenía anteriormente un Onkyo 656 que sirvió su propósito algunos años (aunque ya tenía detallitos) y al conectar este la diferencia fue naturalmente abismal.Más allá del sonido (que a mí me parece muy bueno pero es finalmente subjetivo):A estas alturas con el firmware actualizado ya tiene todas las funciones de HDMI 2.1 con excepción de QMS (que nunca va a venir a pesar de que lo prometieron originalmente).La construcción es sólida y se ve muy bonito. No soy fan de los acabados piano porque tengo gatos pero en condiciones normales es un acabado que se ve muy bien a pesar de ser plástico. El diseño es minimalista y la pantalla integrada es muy pequeña (se puede apagar o controlar el brillo).El DAC es muy bueno, la división de canales también. Definitivamente ayuda mucho correr el sistema de corrección de audio YPAO para ajustar lo necesario al entorno donde se reproduce y el equipo que se está usando.El menú de configuración es bastante completo aunque un poco anticuado. También tiene una interfaz web que se puede acceder desde cualquier browser en la red que permite modificar cualquier opción del equipo.Totalmente recomendado.
marcelo
Comentado en Brasil el 20 de diciembre de 2023
Produto bem construido, fácil de manuseio; Reprodução do som bem honesta!(possui a potência aproximada de 450W).
DG
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 20 de junio de 2022
The RX-A4A is very easy to use via either the remote control or the MusicCast iOS app. The front panel of the unit has only two dials (volume and input selector) and four buttons for selecting pre-programmed inputs. Plus front panel connectors for USB and a headphone. Missing is a front panel connector for HDMI which is unfortunate because there are still times I want to connect a laptop to the receiver using my traveling HDMI cable. Now I have to dedicate an HDMI cable connected to a back panel HDMI connection.My previous AV receiver was the RX-V2095 purchased in 2007. That has pretty good audio but the RX-A4A noticeably improves upon that unit especially on the predefined audio and video settings for concert halls and Sci-Fi movie content. Most interesting is the Artificial Intelligence surround sound choice. It does a decent job of determining the best distribution of voice and instrumentation to the speakers based on the source. But I do find I don't like the AI distribution on older audio content that originated from the early days of stereo. Too much of the voice is pushed to the center speaker on that old content which indicates the AI is working as programmed but I'm more used to the 60's and 70's music being evenly distributed between two front speakers. So the best choice, as it was with the RX-2095 was to evenly instruments and voice to all speakers. In my case 7 channel stereo. Otherwise I am pleased with how the AI Surround works.Video management is much easier than the RX-2095 and there is no degradation of video quality that I'm seeing but I'm also not doing any detailed analysis on that.So overall I am very pleased with the RX-A4A. Easy to use and outstanding audio.
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