|
Flat Panels
Rear-Projection TV Front Projectors Receivers HT in a Box Speakers Recently Added
Video Displays
All In One HT
Speakers
Sources
Electronics
Other Hardware
Custom Install
Software
HT Gamer Hook Me Up HT Talks To Boot Camp Advice From the Experts Shane Buettner Mark Fleischmann Audio/Video News CEDIA 2008 CES 2008 CEDIA 2007 HE 2007 CES 2007 CEDIA 2006 Dealer Locator AV Links HT Galleries Cable Resources Hi-Rez Audio A/V Glossary Contact Us Customer Service Advertiser Index New Subscription Digital HT Renew Give a Gift Sub Services Flatscreen TVs LCD TVs Plasma TVs HDTV AV Receivers Home Theater in a Box Digital Projectors DLP Projectors Video Projectors Surround Sound Dolby 5.1 |
Harman/Kardon DPR 1005 A/V Receiver and Paradigm Monitor v.4 Series Speaker System
Synergistic sounds. This review brings together two brands that are special to me: Harman/Kardon and Paradigm. When I was a teenager, I bought a Harman receiver with the money I earned running deliveries for the local supermarket. You know how that is: Nothing ever gets close to the thrill of the first one. I wore out several LP copies of Sgt. Pepper and Led Zeppelin II over that 15-watt-per-channel receiver. Much, much later, in the late '90s, I reviewed a set of Paradigm Atoms. Those little speakers sounded surprisingly huge, and, even more importantly, they were a lot of fun. The Atoms lingered in my listening room long after I finished the review, and that's probably the best indication of what separates good speakers from great speakers. For this back-to-the-future review, I paired Harman's DPR 1005 Digital Path Receiver with Paradigm's newly revised Monitor Series v.4 speakers. Looks like a good combination, but let's see.
Harman/Kardon DPR 1005
The DPR 1005's surround-processing talents go way beyond the standard Dolby and DTS 5.1/6.1 offerings. It also sports Harman's proprietary Logic 7 and VMAx processors, DTS 96/24, HDCD, Dolby Pro Logic IIx, Dolby Virtual Speaker, and, my favorite new techno bauble, Dolby Headphone. Few $3,000 pre/pros are as well equipped. Setting up all of those surround modes would be a royal pain if it weren't for the DPR 1005's aptly named Global Bass Manager. Dial in the speaker sizes, crossover points for all of the speakers, and speaker distance/delays for a surround format, say DTS ES, and the Global Bass Manager will duplicate those settings for every source and surround option—including the 7.1 (SACD/DVD-Audio) inputs. The one snag is that the DPR 1005 digitizes its analog inputs to maintain its all-digital integrity. I wish the DPR 1005 also offered a direct bypass for SACD and DVD-Audio, but the good news is that it's one of the very few receivers (or players) that provides full bass management and speaker delays for high-resolution audio formats. The end result is a more-consistently balanced sound with DVD movies and high-resolution audio formats, especially for subwoofer/satellite-based systems that require carefully tuned bass management to sound their best. If you want to get tweaky, turn off the Global Bass Manager and independently set up each source and surround mode. Auto set-up and calibration can be a useful feature for home theater newbies, if they don't mind futzing around with a separate microphone. Harman has a better idea. The DPR 1005's mike is integrated into the remote control—so it's easier to use. The catch is, Harman's EzSet auto-calibration system only balances the speaker volume levels. Most other brands (and some of Harman's newer A/V receivers) cover a lot more ground: They determine speaker size, set subwoofer crossover points, set delays, and provide room equalization. On the video connectivity side, I was surprised to note that the DPR 1005 doesn't convert composite and S-video sources to component video.
Highlights
Paradigm Monitor v.4 Series
The Monitor 11 tower, CC-370, and ADP-370 share identical 6.5-inch copolymer drivers and 1-inch titanium dome tweeters. The system's timbre-matching is excellent, as is its coherency; all of the Monitors speak with one voice. The Monitor 11 adds three 6.5-inch carbon-infused woofers to provide low-end muscle.
Article Continues: Page 2 »
|
|


Multiroom functionality is getting lots of attention in the feature-driven receiver market, so Harman's design engineers endowed the DPR 1005 with a wide variety of options. It's fully compatible with home-automation systems via its RS-232 port. A-BUS capability offers a somewhat simpler multizone approach, and there's a second remote control for the second zone. If you're content with 5.1 surround, you can reassign channels six and seven to deliver stereo sound to another room.