Muser-
Not sure if this is helpful as it might be too late. During this crisis, I spoke to Onkyo somewhere and they estimated video board repair between $300-$600. At that time, I had also done some research which suggested this processor runs (very) hot and video board and caps on top can slowly fry. One solution is to buy an exhaust fan that sits on top of unit- check google there was a company that had a bunch and I think they all run under $100.
My solution was to send satellite box hdmi directly to projector, of course precludes switching to blue ray player except manually. Onkyo then serves as audio only processor.
I finally took the high road out last month- purchased 2nd hand from an audio friend a McIntosh MX150. Awesome and expensive unit! Not sure yet what to do with Onkyo, maybe Craig's list at $100.
Good luck!
Peter in Florida
Peter:
Thanks. I seem to have run across the same price on replacing a board. I called the local Onkyo repair shop (California) and they declined to suggest what replacement of the board would cost. I bought mine used for $500 so it seems foolish to pay the same to fix it. Though if I bought another one used, would that be any different?
Did you choose the McIntosh because of perceived superior longevity? Or did you do a little research to determine the McIntosh holds up longer? I'm wondering if the Anthem, McIntosh, Classe, etc. might not be "worth" the extra cost because of a longer life? The Onkyo sound was OK, not on par with my 2 channel setup, but it's acceptable for movies and Wii duty. If I replace it, rather than fix it, I'm thinking of applying a bit more money to the processor since my 2 channel gets way less use these days (I have an active 7 year old boy).
If you have thoughts you'd like to share, I'd love to steal some of your knowledge.
Larry