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Onkyo TX-NR906 AV Receiver Review

Author Danny Philips
Published 10th Oct 2008
Manufacturer Onkyo
Supplier Superfi
Price £1,217.38 (Exc VAT)
as reviewed £1,399.99 (Inc VAT)
Latest Price Click here
Design Score 9 for Design
Features Score 10 for Features
Performance Score 10 for Performance
Value Score 10 for Value
Overall Score 10 for Overall
Onkyo TX-NR906 AV Receiver
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Not so long ago we cast our eyes (and ears) over Onkyo's TX-SR576, a great value entry-level receiver that offers Dolby Digital Plus decoding and superb audio performance for the money. But Onkyo's ability to deliver this sort of amazing sound quality at the lower end of the price scale left us tingling with excitement at the prospect of what its high-end models are capable of - and now we've got the chance to find out with the TX-NR906.

It's the replacement for the universally adored TX-NR905 and as you'd expect for a receiver costing well over a grand, its specification is absolutely staggering, providing the perfect demonstration of how today's AV receivers have gone from simply decoding movie soundtracks to performing a wide range of essential functions, not all of which are audio related.


Perhaps the most impressive of its talents is its networking capability (indicated by the ‘N' in the model name), which allows you to stream MP3, WMA, AAC, WAV, FLAC, and Ogg Vorbis audio tracks from a networked PC, as well as listen to internet radio stations using the vTuner portal.

And like many of today's AV receivers, the Onkyo boasts 1080p video upscaling, but this is no ordinary upscaler - at its heart is the HQV Reon-VX chipset from Silicon Optix, recognised as one of the world's most advanced video processors. Most companies would stop there, but not Onkyo - the TX-NR906 is also the world's first AV receiver to feature video calibration facilities courtesy of the Imaging Science Foundation, which allow you to tweak the brightness, contrast, hue, saturation and gamma levels on each video input.

But audio is the TX-NR906's raison d'ętre, and on that score it leaves no stone unturned. It blasts out 7 x 230W of room-filling power and is equipped with three Texas Instruments Aureus 32-bit DSP chips, which allow the unit to decode any format you throw at it, including Dolby True HD, DTS HD Master Audio, Dolby Digital Plus and DTS HD. It also gets the George Lucas seal of approval with its THX Ultra2 Plus certification, which incorporates THX Loudness Plus technology - a new processing algorithm that enhances sound at low volumes.


You'll also find a wealth of other audio wizardry courtesy of Audyssey, including a MultiEQ XT mode that checks the characteristics of your room and system (number of speakers, their size, distance from the listening position and crossover frequencies) using test tones and a setup microphone placed at up to eight positions around the room, before automatically setting the optimum EQ levels. This can be used in conjunction with Audyssey Dynamic Volume and Dynamic EQ, which process the sound in real time to level out the varying volume levels of different types of material, and to maintain consistent sound quality when the volume is adjusted.

The scary thing is that these are merely the highlights - there's a plethora of other listening modes and high-powered audio circuitry on board, and we'd need a separate website to list them all (check Onkyo's website for a full spec run-down).

 

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Latest 4 of 10 Comments

Have your say: Leave a comment below about this article.

comment Nice Guy said on 26th November 2008

I have an NR906 and the reason I 'took the plunge' on a complex piece of kit was my experience with Onkyo. It is a seriously reliable and well built product...across the ... more

comment t99krs1 said on 26th December 2008

I have a question, I'm considering buying NR906, I wanted to ask what speakers are recommended for the NR906.

comment bedwards500 said on 22nd February 2009

Hey, Danny P, great review! I'm trying to decide between this receiver and Pioneer's SC-07. Any chance you will be reviewing that receiver? Or perhaps comparing the tw... more

comment Hary said on 29th June 2009

Well I bought it after a long research on the net and reading users and professional reviews. I got it to replace my good old Kenwood receiver which served me for more than 13 year... more

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