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Aug 24

Sony STR-DG810 6.1 Channel Home Theater Receiver

The Sony STR-DG810 Audio Video Receiver delivers 660 Watts of room-filling sound across 6.1 channels. Your Blu-ray Discs and XM radio have never looked or sounded better. Two HDMI inputs make high-definition video crisp and breathtaking, and Dolby decoding gives you unbelievable sound. The Digital Media Port lets you play music from a PC, iPod or Bluetooth device through your receiver. BRAVIA Theater Sync takes you beyond simple audio and video transmission, allowing you to control select BRAVIA televisions and Sony HDMI audio and video components with a single remote. Hook up the optional Connect-and-Play antenna for instant XM satellite radio (subscription required). Digital Cinema Auto Calibration adjusts for speaker placement, distance and delay. With amazing theater-quality audio and optimization for 1080p for top-shelf video, the Sony’s STR-DG810 Audio Video Receiver will be sure to move you.

Sony STR-DG810 6.1 Channel Home Theater Receiver

Technical Details

* 6-channel home theater receiver with 110 Watts-per-channel
* Optimized for Blu-ray disc and other HD sources
* BRAVIA Theater Sync
* Digital media port
* XM satellite radio ready

Customer feedback:

1. I got this for it’s HDMI switching capability. It does this well and that’s a welcome accomplishment for $300 at this point in time. There is now 1 cable! from the HD DVD player to the recvr and 1 cable! from the satellite recvr and 1 cable to the plasma monitor. That’s pretty exciting in my book. The prior reviewer seemed to expect it to do analog to digital conversion of video signals. That’s far from realistic at this price point, but it seems like the 910 may do that. For me this receiver replaces an older Sony ES (high end) with better amplication. One knows the 810 is a step down just from its reduced weight. But in my simple home theater context I’m very happy with this recvr’s capability. Of course, I’ve only had it a week. It has a nice blend of features, and even at this level its manual is a bit daunting re the features to be learned. For my wife, it’s handy that it allows you to rename inputs. So, instead of SAT appearing on the display I changed it to DIRECTV, and I changed VIDEO2 to EMPTY. Radio stations can be preset and named too. Regardless of which input you switch to, it remembers your last sound settings for it — that’s helpful. When you insert headphones for late night tv watching, it senses that, turns off the speakers and optimizes the sound fields for 2 channel listening. Very nice. I hope it gives me many years of service.

2. If you want 3 HDMI inputs and don’t want upconversion of non-hdmi inputs (a mixed bag anyway) or on-screen display (something that is useful for the initial setup but that you won’t use often), then this is a bargain. I think Sony aimed this receiver at the user who wants the “sweet spot” between features and cost, and this fits the bill. Good picture and sound quality and the display on the receiver front is easy to read, which makes up for the lack of on-screen display. The microphone speaker setup was easy to do, but I found the results to be a bit off, so I made minor adjustments, which was simple to do. A good receiver with advanced features for a good price. You won’t find anything else with 3 hdmi inputs at this low price.



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