• out of stock

[Afterpay] Denon AVR-S760H 7.2 Channel 8K AV Receiver $683 ($733 without Afterpay) Delivered ($1399 RRP) @ Homeaudiosales eBay

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HGTAUGAPAYDAY4

[Afterpay] Denon AVR-S760H 7.2 Channel 8K AV Receiver $683 Delivered ($1399 RRP) @ Homeaudiosales eBay

Use the following code to get the price to $683 with Afterpay: APAYDAY4 (or $733 with other payment types with code HGTAUG)

Full specs and product details can be found: https://www.denon.com/en-au/shop/avreceiver/avrs760h

These are brand new units with 2-year local Australian Warranty

We are Home Audio Sales, the Official eBay Store for Masimo Consumer, the Australian Distributor for many premium audio brands including Denon, Marantz, Polk Audio, Bowers & Wilkins and many more.

Original HGTAUG Coupon Deal

Original APAYDAY4 Coupon Deal

This is part of Afterpay Day sale for 2023

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Masimo Corp
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closed Comments

  • +6

    $683 with afterpay code APAYDAY4

  • Sound United eh?

    "We are Home Audio Sales, the Official eBay Store for Masimo Consumer"

    The Australian Distributor for your own brands.

    You are DEI holdings.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DEI_Holdings

    Still, a good price for a good marque, providing you don't do to them what Akai did to Philips and Pye.

    Honesty is valued on Ozbargain.

  • Need a Reciever that is 'shallow' my current 5.1 needs an upgrade - but it also hangs 10cm out the front of my converted fireplace shaleves… and I won't get away with buying a new one that does the same.

    So much empty space in these things and surely the depth is a hang over form CRT TV's.

    • +2

      I figured it was for passive cooling? People cram these into spaces with no ventelation so they have to build it in as best they can

      • Part of it yeah, but my phone , tablet, heck a Nuc has more computing power and cools OK. these just have big old chunky connectors and fat old capacitors - surely they could if they wanted to skinny these down, add real heat sinks vs air volume etc.

        • +2

          It's not about computing power, its about consumed electricity (wattage) and disipating the waste heat of the electricity. Your nuc might be consuming 30w at full load - a reciever is consuming 1500w or more. For scale, a kettle consume between 1200w and 3000w, and that creates a lot of heat.

          • +1

            @Kill Joy: Yep. Easy way to explain it to people is that all electricity when it's used turns into heat because it was made by heat at the power station.

        • I forgot to address another part of your comment.

          add real heat sinks vs air volume etc.

          that would then require some active cooling with a fan across those heatsinks. This introduces noise, filters, maintenance, etc to the device. That probably could do this (and i bet do for niche scenarios) but living room appliance space is not a large constraint so it's not selected for by the market.

          • @Kill Joy: Pretty sure amps have heat sinks in em without fans. It still draws the heat away and increases the surface area, no?

      • I think passive cooling is a large part of it but there are probably other factors.

        Receivers have been this size for a while so I think it is a bit of a convention and having a similar size through the receiver model range allows for economies of scale. They do get racked so that places some restrictions on width.

        They aren't as full now, but pre-HDMI a lot of the backpanel area was taken up with input/output connectors.

        There are compact receivers that come with less connectors and lower amplification. I don't know if those limitations are purely a result of size or who the models are targeted for.

  • The spec says 8k but is that 48gbit pass through. Will it do 4k 120Hz chroma 4.4.4 10bit-12bit.

    • If you click on the link your answers are there in the specs. Will do 40gbit pass through and has chroma 4.4.4.

      • Most TVs are only 10bit colour depth so 40gbps is just fine. this is a great deal for a future proof AV Receiver.

    • +1

      444 10-12 bit at 60fps looks to work as it's under 40gbps

      444 10 bit @120fps is 40.1 Gbps
      444 12 bit @120fps is 48.1 Gbps

      Source: https://imgur.com/ZTkFKBt.jpg

  • Until when is this? Would live to sell my yamaha first haha

  • thoughts on this vs Denon AVR-X1700H ?

  • Any chance of MORE stock?

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