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Electronics Retailer: Consumer Electronics: Home Theater HDMI Receivers

Our Home Theater HDMI Receiver Store offers Online Shopping for a huge selection of Home Theater Receivers from all the major brands including Denon, Harman Kardon, Onyko, Pioneer, Sony and Yamaha. We have the largest selection on the Internet. We hope you enjoy shopping at the Shack!

Yamaha RX-V661BL 7.1-Channel Digital Home Theater Receiver

Yamaha RX-V661BL 7.1-Channel Digital Home Theater Receiver
Brand: Yamaha
Category: CE

List Price: $549.95
Buy New: $288.44
You Save: $261.51 (48%)



New (1) Refurbished (1) from $288.44

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 28 reviews
Sales Rank: 5910

Color: Black
Media: Electronics
Batteries Included: Yes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 15.5 x 17.1 x 6.8
Warranty: Unknown

MPN: RX-V661BL
Model: RX-V661BL
UPC: 027108927411
EAN: 0027108927411
ASIN: B000OOQUTC

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • 7-channel 630W powerful surround sound (90W x 7), 2 Zone/2 Source Receiver
  • 4 SCENE buttons on front panel and remote unit offering easier operation
  • Video up-conversion and component video output with Time Base Corrector
  • iPod compatibility via optional Yamaha YDS-10
  • XM Ready with XM HD Surround powered by Neural Surround

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Yamaha's RX-V661 7.1-Channel Digital Home Theater Receiver is flexible, versatile home theater. This 7.1-channel home theater receiver has an amazing array of new features. The four programmable SCENE buttons give you one-button access for everything from your DVD player to your iPod. High quality sound reproduction, assignable amplifiers and 1080p-compatible HDMI give you optimized sound. Give yourself a true Home Theater experience. 1080p-compatible HDMI (2 in/1 out) Max. Power - 130W x 7 channels (8 ohms, 1 kHz, 10% THD) Min. RMS Power - 90W x 7 channels (8 ohms, 20Hz - 20kHz, 0.06% THD) Upgraded CINEMA DSP with 17 DSP programs Compressed Music Enhancer Burr-Brown 192kHz/24-bit DACs used in all channels Initial Volume Setting and Maximum Volume Setting Assignable amplifiers for bi-amp connection 3 HDTV compatible component video inputs iPod song titles displayed in English and Western European languages on thefront panel and on-screen display Night Listening Enhancer (Cinema and Music) High-performance CINEMA DSP LSI (64-bit floating point quantization) SILENT CINEMA and Virtual CINEMA DSP Audio Delay for adjusting lip-sync (0-160ms) Preout terminals for front, center, surround and surround back and subwoofer out 9 selectable subwoofer crossover frequencies Analog mixdown 8-channel external decoder input Speaker A, B, A+B selection 40-station auto preset tuning Preset remote with illuminated buttons Inputs - HDMI; Dock Terminal for YDS-10; Fixed and assignable Optical Digital and Coaxial Digital; S-Video; Fixed and assignable Component Video; Analog A/V and Audio; Multi-Channel External Decoder (8 ch) Outputs - HDMI; Analog A/V; Analog Audio; Optical Digital (fixed and assignable); S-Video; S-Video/Composite Monitor; Speaker (without subwoofer) 7 ch/9 ter; Subwoofer Dimensions(WxHxD) - 435 x 171 x 393 mm Weight - 11.6 kg


Customer Reviews:   Read 23 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Should have looked at more!   September 6, 2008
Easy to connect everything especially using the HDMI outputs. Very good sound with 7 speakers (using Bose for all but the 2 rear which I installed Niles in wall flush mount. Biggest disappointment is not being able to use my Sony universal remote. The Yamaha won't turn off with anything other than its own remote, which by the way, is very weak. Overall, satisfied but there are better units out there for the same price.


4 out of 5 stars Bits and pieces   August 25, 2008
I primarily bought this unit for 1. The close out price. 2. For the two hdmi inputs with one hdmi output and 3. For the phonograph connectors (I have a few albums:) Older models don't have hdmi and many newer models don't have phonograph connectors. (But I believe their manuals, available online, might suggest how to connect. So if that is a concern with other models, you might check for a manual.)

I agree with others about this remote. It is not... comfortable. And the issue that "Power" turns it on. "Stand by" turns it off. So yeah, even your universal remote is going to need one button to power on and another to power it off.

As for finding a comfortable remote... I was used to the Time Warner remotes like the URSU-8700L. After looking at many, including the Harmony models online (Which are surely easier to program.) I bought the Universal WR7 at Walmart for under near the price of a blu-ray movie. It has four buttons across the bottom just like the 4 Yamaha scene buttons. Under Sat/Cab, these 4 can function for the A, B, C, D of the Time Warner remote. The Menu, Guide, Info and Exit mimic the Time Warner also.

The DVR or DVD play section work for the Tuner presets with head to head teaching. Chapter advance (+-) for A-E group and fast forward and rewind (>>,<<) to cycle the 8 presets on each of the groups. I'm still tweaking, but very happy with it for this Yamaha, Time Warner DVR and blu-ray/DVD. (Search for "WR7 remote" at wally world.)

Suggestion: Program TV and SAT/CAB buttons both to the code for Time Warner box. Then on TV, customize the few needed individual buttons like power on and off to the TV remote in head to head learning. That way if TV or SAT/CAB is last button hit, they both do the same thing for all but the few things you really need on the TV.

And the Yamaha power on and power off is solved by using AUD to turn it on and AUX to turn it off. (Teach one in head to head learning) That way all other keys TV, DVD, Sat/Cab, CD and VCR could be used for those devices if you have them.

I don't know if a photo showing Yamaha RX-V661 remote, Time Warner remote, and Universal WR7 remote will fly, but I might try it.



4 out of 5 stars Yamaha is a good bet   June 18, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I bought Yamaha products many years ago and was very pleased with quality and performance. I think that holds true this time too.

Had some shipping issues to Alaska and the unit appeared to have taken some "hits" as there is a small (barely noticeable) crease in the bezel where some ape dropped it. The unit functions flawlessly so it is pretty tough.

The sound quality is excellent. I only have it hooked up as a 3.1 system so far since I hate running wires across the floor and as yet I'm too lazy to wire the floors/walls.

The auto sensor is easy to use and does a passable job. The built-in sound functions are too numerous IMO and are more a sales gimmick than anything. I use about 3 or 4 modes: standard and enhanced stereo in either 2 channel or 7 channel, the dolby II and often the virtual surround which is really good for some cable TV movies and DVDs.

I noticed a volume decrease when I hooked up the center channel speaker but that may be the speaker not the unit. I had plenty of "room" on the amp to adjust for this draw so just commenting...

My system is hooked to Bose 301 bookshelf R/L that date from about 1982 (the stereo shop guy said there wasn't much out there better for my small living room although I had considered a Yamaha sound bar). I have a Yamaha subwoofer and center channel. I primarily intended to upgrade my old 1980 Pioneer SX-6 because it had too few I/O and I decided on an AVR to get the video conversions. A wise idea.

I am not using the HDMI channel since it is not down scalable: I use the component video and the optical audio which are a formidable pair and this AVR will upscale just about every signal for output on these channels. (Not sure what if any quality is to be gained using HDMI just one less cable?) I may hook up the HDMI when I get a blue ray down the road but then again I have heard others who ran into problems with older components and compatibilty.

All in all a great box for the money. I also considered the Onkyo machines as these were cheaper for the features but after surfing the net (and contacting Onkyo) I decided that they have a higher rate of "issues" and seemingly a higher failure rate (YGWYPF) There were also several internet gripes about Onkyo's warranty repair system. I live off the beaten path and don't have a repair center to take things to, so while it was a close choice, I paid a couple more bucks for the Yamaha.



4 out of 5 stars Nice reciever, but complex   June 15, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Very nice receiver, but the operation of it requires almost a degree in engineering (which I have, but still had to study the manual - which of course engineers don't like to do). The sound is great and it has more features than you can imagine once you figure them out.


5 out of 5 stars Jeff from Fort Worth   May 27, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

So far, it has surpassed all my expectatations. It's great being able to switch to different zone areas, especially the zone next to the pool in the backyard. I would recommend this home theatre receiver to anyone who wants high quality at an affordable price.

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