Home LAN network wireless access point
December 8 2009

Onkyo TX-NR807 7.2-Channel A/V Surround Home Network Receiver

  • 135 Watts per Channel at 8 ohms, 20 Hz–20 kHz, 0.08%, 2 Channels Driven, FTC
  • THX Select2 Plus Certified with THX Loudness Plus
  • HDMI Video Upscaling to 1080p with Faroudja DCDi Cinema
  • Audio and 1080p Video Processing via HDMI (6 Inputs and 1 Output)
  • Powered Zone 2 and Zone 3 for Playback of Separate Sources in Other Rooms

Product DescriptionThe TX-NR807 brings together the very latest mid-range home-theater functionality and adds one major upgrade: networking capability. An Ethernet port on the TX-NR807 allows it to receive and output audio files playing in real-time on your PC. Alternatively, you can bypass your PC and enjoy a direct connection to streaming internet radio stations such as Pandora and Rhapsody. Naturally, the TXNR807 also handles all of your high-definition audio and video sources—co. . . More >>

Onkyo TX-NR807 7.2-Channel A/V Surround Home Network Receiver

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5 Responses to “Onkyo TX-NR807 7.2-Channel A/V Surround Home Network Receiver”

  1. Video processing is excellent, but audio quality is terrible. At low volume levels, there is distortion and hiss as loud as the music. Onkyo Customer Support said “do a master reset” which did no good. I have not heard from them since. This unit sounds nowhere near as good as the Sony I am replacing it with.
    Rating: 2 / 5

  2. Lori Burke says:

    I would give a review of this product if I could get one. I ordered one and in transit someone swiped it out of the box and replaced it with a 50lb bag of sand. Got my replacement today and guess what: another bag of sand. Opened it right in front of the UPS guy. I think he was more surprised than me. You could see someone had been in the box as it was retaped. I’m not sure where these are getting stolen but this is getting old! If this isn’t made right like right away I’m asking for a refund and taking my money elsewhere. Amazon has been stellar through all of this so far but now it’s time for them to step up to the plate and get this resolved.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. Germania says:

    After owning two Onkyo receivers in the past, I have to say that this is the best one and really packs a lot of goodies. I still use the previous receivers for various things, but the last one (HT-R410) did not include HDMI (of course) and had a very poor AM/FM tuner. The tuner on this one is much improved. The TX-NR807 has so many great features, including a phono input, a universal port for the iPod, multizone capability for powering 3 zones (although playback is reduced with the addition of each zone), speaker layout adjustment, receiver panel brightness control, a late night function so you can hear quiet parts of movies without turning up the volume, several listening modes, network capability, etc. The only thing that is slightly disappointing is that it doesn’t include wifi, so I have to add an ethernet bridge. I’m hoping that once I add a bridge I can still use encryption. Anyone have experience with this? If it weren’t for the lack of wifi, I would have given it 5 stars.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  4. R. Amano says:

    i made sure i opened the box before the UPS guy left, and am happy to say, no sand bags. so far, i’ve had a sony(pro logic), hk, and an outlaw 1050. i’m not sure if it sounds that much better than my outlaw at 5. 1, but after i added a couple of height speakers, it sounds pretty awesome. Dolby PLIIz is pretty impressive. i also tried pandora and it works great, not sure if i’ll ever use the regular tuner. the audissey setup was great. no more playing with the sound level meter. although, when i have time, i’ll be checking audissey’s levels with a sound level meter just to make sure. i only gave it a 4, because i believe a 5 should be reserved for the higher end stuff. plus, i don’t believe i played with it long enough to say it’s a perfect 5. there is definitely a little learning curve involved, not really plug and play. if the ranking was for receivers under $1000, than i would rank it closer to 5.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  5. gordo says:

    Upgraded from a twelve-year-old Yamaha with lots of oomph but little in the way of current sound processing and of course no HDMI. Did a massive amount of research in advance, but in the end decided that the NR807 gave me everything I need for now and well into the future. One of the fullest and most immersive soundstages I’ve ever heard, a comparatively intuitive interface, auto firmware updates and PC audio streaming via its Ethernet port, more setup and configuration options than I knew existed, and a full half-dozen (!) HDMI inputs. And plenty of power sitting in reserve for those moments in a movie that are crafted to make you jump out of your chair. Never boomy or tinny or lacking, the unit simply sounds “fluid. ”

    Yes, it has its bells and whistles, but this is by no means a “bells and whistles” receiver.
    Rating: 5 / 5

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