Most importantly the input sensitivity of the separate amp must be the same as that of the Denons Amplifier section.Some amps have built attenuation controls which allow you match levels.
My advice (for what it's worth). Your biggest bang for the buck improvement would come from adding a single, good quality stereo external power amplifier to drive your mains. You could bi-wire them if you wanted.Your invaluable help will be greatly appreciated!
I knew this would be a learning experience! Thanks.Those specs you are stating for the analog preamp input not the power amp input. (They are completely different things) Power amp input sensitivities are generally in the 750 mv to 1 v range with an input impedance of 50 -100 k.
Or perhaps a reasonable stereo amp to drive the surround backs, whose performance will be less demanding and perhaps may be easier to integrate with the fronts rather than having a stereo drive the front pair with the Denon driving the Center. The rear soundstage steering may be a little compromised, but perhaps rather that than the front/back soundstage with different amplification between the front pair and the other 5 speakers....good quality stereo external power amplifier to drive your mains
I missed this question...Edit. Although its not clear what output the 1.2 V is refering to.What is Direct mode?I assume it bypasses all EQ ,processing etc?
Yep, you could get a relatively inexpensive amplifier for this duty, as long as the back channels are directed to a line-level output at the rear of the receiver. This would maintain the front main and center being driven by the Denon and free's up those back channel amps so you could bi-amp your mains...Or perhaps a reasonable stereo amp to drive the surround backs, whose performance will be less demanding and perhaps may be easier to integrate with the fronts rather than having a stereo drive the front pair with the Denon driving the Center.
Yeah, the Denon has pre-outs for all the channels, including the rear surrounds.Yep, you could get a relatively inexpensive amplifier for this duty, as long as the back channels are directed to a line-level output at the rear of the receiver.
brucek
The only function of a digital output on a receiver or processor is for digital dubbing using a CD or MD recorder. It's analogous to an analog tape loop, only in digital.but the manual and resources on the web are somewhat ambiguous re Denons implementation of "Digital output"
Set the back channels speaker setup trim to the same level you used when you used an internal amp (as a start) and adjust the input level control of the amplifier to match the level in the speaker setup pink noise. If you think the input control of the amp is down too far, increase the receiver trim on the back channels until its reasonable. It's a trade off between the input sensitivity of the amplifier to produce a full power output and noise from the receiver.Just out of interest, how would one go about calibrating the level of the external amp when it has its own volume control?