🎶 Elevate Your Entertainment Experience!
The Onkyo TX-NR7100 is a state-of-the-art 9.2-channel AV receiver delivering 100 watts per channel, featuring Dirac Live room correction, seamless integration with Sonos, and advanced HDMI 2.1 capabilities for an unparalleled audio-visual experience.
Wattage | 100 watts |
Number of Channels | 9 |
Output Wattage | 220 Watts |
Output Power | 220 Watts |
Audio Output Type | Speakers |
Format | WAV |
Wireless Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
Internet Applications | Amazon Music |
Control Method | Remote |
Total Number of HDMI Ports | 8 |
Connector Type | RCA, HDMI |
Audio Encoding | Stereo |
Audio Output Mode | Stereo |
Number of Audio Channels | 9.2 Channel |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, Wi-Fi |
Controller Type | Remote |
Additional Features | Built-In Streaming Services, Discrete Zone 3 HDMI Switching, Klipsch Optimize Mode, Ultimate 4K Gaming Experience, Works with Sonos Certified, THX Certified, 9.2-Channel Dolby Atmos, DTS:X Support, Bi-Directional Bluetooth Wireless Technology, Smart Home Compatible with Voice Control |
Compatible Devices | Television, Speaker |
Item Weight | 27.5 Pounds |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 14.9"D x 17.13"W x 6.8"H |
Color | Black |
H**
9.2 powerhouse
I was so happy with the 7100 I had in my living room that this is the second one I have purchased, this time to replace the Onkyo 797 in my bedroom system.While I considered the new RZ30, I didn't see the need for the extras it offers from a price perspective, and with the 7100 going out of production, this seemed to be the best time to make the upgrade.While I used a manual setup due to the unique speaker placement that would give Dirac problems, I have used Dirac in the 7100 for installs for other people and had great results, although using the PC based version with a proper calibrated mic is preferred.Power is ample for a small to medium size room, and in stereo mode the soundstage is both wide with plenty of depth. In comparison to the Denon 3800, the Denon has a much smaller soundstage in stereo but offers more flexibility if you are using multiple subwoofers - surround experience is very comparable.There's been some noise about the 7100 struggling with speakers that have an impedance lower than 8ohms, and while the bedroom system is all 8ohm, the living room system has 6ohm speakers on the 3 main channels and 4ohm speakers on the surrounds and I have never had a problem, even when pushing the system to higher than theater level sound levels - all while having the 7100 in "6+ ohm mode".I'm extremely satisfied with this receiver. Unless you need preamp outs for future expansion, the 7100 checks all the right boxes for a 9.2 AV receiver. The fact that it's insanely inexpensive now is icing on the cake.
H**Y
Works WELL Priced Good !!
Great Shape !! Well Packaged !! Very Good Price !! Great Seller and they packaged it EXTREMELY WELL !! Installs a breeze !! Bluetooth Connects flawlwessly !! It sounds INCREDIBLE !! It is EXTREMELY easy to set up and functions Excellently !!
B**P
Good upgrade
Seems to be a great receiver so far, powering Klipsch R-600F towers, R34C, and R-120SW. Previous receiver was a Panasonic SA-HE70 which was over 20 years old, but still sounded decent. I had been debating for a while on whether to upgrade the receiver thinking I may not see much difference, but I was pleasantly surprised. It seems like it really woke up my speakers and I've barely played with all of the different functions.
J**F
Good receiver with some caveats
First, I bought my receiver new from this page but it was clearly a repack/open box. (Box had been retaped, manual pouch tape was cut, protective wrap around the receiver was cut.) That's ok given the price - this receiver was really being sold for $1,300 when it first came out, and still goes for close to $1,000 everywhere else. I just wish that had been advertised. I'd have still bought it. But caveat emptor if you buy from this page. It's still clearly new or at least mint, but the box and manuals, at least, had definitely been opened. I did not get a printed full manual at all and I'm not sure if Onkyo didn't include one or it was taken out of my box.As for the receiver, it has pretty much everything you could want including a couple "retro" inputs like component and phono. I personally have a separate stereo receiver since I also have a tape deck (which requires an audio out in addition to an audio in, and I don't know of any AV receiver that has that), but you can hook up pretty much anything an average person would have in 2024 to this receiver. It has HDMI 2.1, supports HDR 10+, Dolby Vision and HLG, VRR, ALLM, basically all the big acronyms. And it's THX certified, which is nice.I was trying to choose between the 6100 and 7100 and there are some subtle differences beyond the extra speaker support (7.2 vs. 9.2) that pushed me to the 7100 even though I only have a 5.1 system. The first is that the 7100's HDMI inputs are all high bandwidth; the 6100 only has 3 high bandwidth ports. The second is that the 7100 has a removable power cord - I wouldn't pay a huge amount extra for that but I'd pay a little. It's just more convenient, and of course you can just replace the cord if anything happens to it. And lastly, I do have some older components so having component input is a plus - the 6100 doesn't have that.But the thing that pushed me over the edge into buying the 7100 was the Dirac room correction. The 7100 has both AccuEQ and Dirac; the 6100 only has the former. Dirac is supposed to be a lot better. I tried it and it will actually show you a real measurement of your room's tone curve both before and after setup. Mine was basically a mess before setup and totally flat afterwards.Pretty much all AV receivers these days are going to perform as specified, which is why you don't ever see actual performance tests much even on big review sites anymore (I still wish they did them, though). THX certification is also supposed to guarantee a certain level of performance. So it basically comes down to features and livability. In terms of the former, this receiver basically has everything.In terms of the latter, there are a couple of little things that I remember from older Onkyo receivers I've had that are still issues. The most annoying is that there is a momentary pause in the audio basically whenever selecting *any* new piece of content. I don't just mean when switching inputs or something. I mean if you're already in YouTube and you start watching a video, the audio will start, drop out for a second, then restart. It does this *every* time. This was a thing but wasn't quite so annoying back when we were all just watching one DVD at a time on our home theater systems. Now that we're watching TV and streaming and everything else, going in and out of content on a whim, it's pretty irritating.I'm still experimenting to see if I can stop this without compromising too much; it may be possible to just lock it in to one audio format and then manually change it when necessary. But so much content uses different audio formats, it'd be nice to be able to leave it on auto. My old Denon, which I replaced with this Onkyo because the center channel on it died, would detect the audio in about half a second and then start playing it uninterrupted. I think what makes the Onkyo so irritating is that it will start playing about 2 seconds of audio, *then* drop out for a second, then come back. And it does this when playing anything. The Denon I had would stick with the last format unless it actually changed.There is an Onkyo app that you can download to control pretty much all of the receiver's functions (more than you can on the remote), even the Dirac curves. But the receiver seems to have trouble staying connected to wifi. This may just be something in my setup, but I've logged in and gotten it to work initially several times; it just doesn't seem to reconnect when turning on the receiver. It thinks it's connected but then when I run the connection test, it fails. If I manually re-log in again, then it works. Again, could be a router thing or something like that; I'm not going to blame the receiver. When the wifi works, the app on the phone actually works well. When the wifi doesn't work, well then the app doesn't either. But then you just use the remote like we all did before smartphones ever existed.One thing I will compliment Onkyo on is the on-screen menu. My Denon receiver had a really rudimentary and ugly menu. This Onkyo has a nicely designed menu with a lot of options. It also has a separate quick menu that will overlay on top of whatever you're watching and that has the most common functions. My Denon receiver's overlay never seemed to quite work right, and just wouldn't show up half the time; the Onkyo's seems to work on everything but the ARC output. If I have it set to the TV input/output, then I don't get the menus. But on all the regular HDMI inputs, it works.The 7100 is a large receiver - I upgraded from a Denon AVR-X1300W and the Onkyo is quite a bit larger. The Denon fit fine in my low profile TV stand; the Onkyo hangs out in front by just a bit (the feet are still on the platform; the front just hangs over) and I had to raise the shelf above it as well.I was disappointed to find that even in a receiver with a $1,300 list price, Onkyo still puts a plastic faceplate and knobs on their receivers. It may look like metal in their pictures, but it is 100% textured plastic. They didn't used to do that - I still have an older 5.1 receiver from them that was kind of a budget receiver at the time (it only has HDMI 1.4, which is why I replaced it long ago) and it has a metal faceplate and knobs - and it's even a curved piece of metal! Then again, that was a "real" Onkyo, before the company went bankrupt and then got bought out. This faceplate it just totally flat - it couldn't have cost them that much more to make it out of metal. It makes me wonder what other corners they're cutting internally these days, if they're willing to save just a few bucks on something so easily noticeable to the consumer. It does not feel like the Onkyo of old, which made upper mid-range components even under their main brand. This receiver feels mid mid, not upper mid.That said, for the price this is actually selling for at the moment, I still think it's worth it. It has the features and probably the real-world performance of a high-end AV receiver. It just has some annoying little issues that I feel like the original Onkyo would have fixed by now, and some cheapening out on the construction despite the high list price. (And hey, maybe that's why the price has had to drop so much - take a hint, Voxx!)
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