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Home   Yamaha RX-V367BL 500-Watt 5.1 Channel AV Receiver (Each, Black) | |
|  | |  | | | Yamaha RX-V367BL 500-Watt 5.1 Channel AV Receiver (Each, Black) | | | | | | | |
List Price:
| $249.95 | |
Our Price:
| $199.99 | |
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| $49.96 (20%)
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YAMRXV367BL | | In Stock | | Availability:
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| | Features | 5-channel 500W powerful surround sound (100W x 5)iPod/iPhone compatibility with optional YDS-12 Universal DockBluetooth (A2DP) compatibility with optional Yamaha Bluetooth Wireless Audio Receiver YBA-101080p-compatible HDMI repeater with 3D (4 in/1 out)SCENE buttons with direct power on (BD/DVD, TV, CD and Radio) ? quick and simple to use
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| | Description | The Yamaha RX-V367BL 5.1-Channel AV Receiver is a great value-priced receiver to help take your home theater experience further. It features the latest HDMI specifications (4 inputs/1 output) with 3D-readiness (with firmware upgrade), 1080p HDMI repeating, and renowned Yamaha technologies like SCENE and CINEMA DSP. Expand your options even further with optional docks (sold separately) to add your iPod, iPhone, or Bluetooth sources. |  |
| | Product Details | | Product Length: | 12.38 inches | | Product Width: | 17.13 inches | | Product Height: | 6.0 inches | | Product Weight: | 19.7 pounds | | Package Length: | 21.2 inches | | Package Width: | 15.7 inches | | Package Height: | 8.5 inches | | Package Weight: | 19.9 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 66 reviews |
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| | Used and New |
| All | |
| $149.00+ $14.49 *Shipping | Used
- Mint | | | $149.99+ $27.79 *Shipping | Used
- Mint | | | $159.99+ $27.79 *Shipping | Refurbished | | | $164.99+ $14.49 *Shipping | Used
- VeryGood | | | $175.00+ $14.49 *Shipping | Used
- Mint | | | $192.17Shipping Free | Refurbished | | | $195.58+ $14.49 *Shipping | New | | | $199.98Shipping Free | New | | | $199.99+ $14.49 *Shipping | New | | | $199.99Shipping Free | New | | | $208.49+ $14.49 *Shipping | New | | | $249.95+ $25.27 *Shipping | New | |
| New | |
| $195.58+ $14.49 *Shipping | New | | | $199.98Shipping Free | New | | | $199.99+ $14.49 *Shipping | New | | | $199.99Shipping Free | New | | | $208.49+ $14.49 *Shipping | New | | | $249.95+ $25.27 *Shipping | New | |
| Used | |
| $149.00+ $14.49 *Shipping | Used
- Mint | | | $149.99+ $27.79 *Shipping | Used
- Mint | | | $164.99+ $14.49 *Shipping | Used
- VeryGood | | | $175.00+ $14.49 *Shipping | Used
- Mint | |
| Refurbished | |
| $159.99+ $27.79 *Shipping | Refurbished | | | $192.17Shipping Free | Refurbished | |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 66 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
53 of 54 found the following review helpful:
Better than expected Apr 18, 2010
By K. Goetz We had a very old audio only receiver and were looking to replace it (almost 10 year old technics). We picked up the Yamaha RX-V367, even though there were no reviews, since the receiver was just released, and it was in our price range (200 to 300). So far we are happy with the new receiver; it is connected to the satellite box, xbox, and blu ray.
Speaker set up: Set of Polk Rti8 (left right and center), and klipsch Klipsch Synergy Series SS.5 rear surround (left and right). The sound coming from the speakers was MUCH better than from our ancient receiver.
Not a fan of the Sound Field Programs, seems too much like a gimmick, and only adds an echo depending on what setting (one setting might effect the vocals more, or another setting might effect the music), but I imagine some people would enjoy that. Has many audio processing options, works great with Netflix streaming, set it to 5ch stereo and it will work great; can clearly listen to what's playing (netflix only streams in 2ch stereo). Mainly use the "Straight" audio processing setting (for xbox and blu ray), I assume the receiver doesn't add any extra "audio goo", and plays direct from the source.
Good video quality, no noticeable video deterioration. Yamaha says it's compatible with HDMI 1.4 and will support 3D (with a firmware upgrade). Not that interested in 3d TVs anyways.
Clear and easy to use menu system (compared to my old technics receiver), competent directions, fairly user friendly.
Has 4 HDMI inputs which was much better than many of the competitors in the same price range. We didn't test the FM/AM tuner, and only connected HDMI and RCA from computer. We were also swayed by the extra bluetooth adapter so we can listen to music (and hopefully stream Hulu audio) wirelessly from the computer (and get rid of the airport express). Will update review after getting bluetooth.
32 of 34 found the following review helpful:
Terrific value for the money Jun 01, 2010
By Dave Dodd
"mtndog"
I rarely do reviews - but here I must make an exception. I highly recommend this unit to anyone looking for a quality receiver to complement a Blu-ray player. I had an older Denon receiver which delivered great sound, but when the Blu-ray movies started arriving from Netflix, I found most of them required a DTS decoder which was absent in the Denon. After considerable research, I stumbled onto the new line of Yamaha receivers. I was a bit dubious, having always previously owned Denon and Sony, but the specs looked good, and the price was unbelievable, so I took the plunge.
After a month or so of use, I have no regrets. The sound quality I am getting from my 5.1 Polks far exceeds the prior system. Sounds are richer, brighter, and the surround has more separation and clarity. For a 100 W per channel system, the power consumption appears amazingly low - the top of the receiver just gets barely warm, not hot. The speaker setup works well, and the movie and music presets, as well as the enhanced 5 ch stereo are outstanding, really enhancing the audio of the corresponding input. The display is large enough to see from the viewing chair, is clean and simple, and keeps the viewer appropriately informed.
I applaud Yamaha for producing such a high quality product at a value price-point.
22 of 23 found the following review helpful:
So Far...Nice!!! Happy!!! Apr 18, 2010
By M. Gorlick
"markie"
just received it yesterday(sat)...has all the great yamaha ease of use...functionalty...intuitive...don't really need to look at the manual....just hooked it up to a samsung 32inch 1080(120hz)/w/ optical cable...sounds great...going to buy a Panasonic DMP-BD85K WiFi Enabled Blu-Ray Disc Player so i will let you know if it true hdmi(both audio & video) not like the yamaha 365(eeeks...what were they thinking?)...waiting for some Polk Audio Monitor 70 3-Way Floorstanding Speakers (Single, Cherry)....will i need a subwoofer? please comment...will update... if this receiver has the features(and they work)....it will be an awesome value...thank you amazon...you delivered in 2 days!!!
Hooked up the polk speakers and ended up buying the Samsung 6500 BluRay/Wifi dvd player...the HDMI connections on the receiver carries both the video & audio signals...love the fact that it has 2 audio optical connections...so pleased with this receiver!!!! would totally recommend for a sound system!!! What a great value especially if you don't want to spend big bucks but want a quality sound system!!
9 of 9 found the following review helpful:
Excellent System For The Money Jun 06, 2011
By GumbyTheCat
"Gumby"
I've had this Yamaha for a few months now, and I am quite happy with it. I bought it to replace an ancient Aiwa 5.1 that was dying on me. The Yamaha is a very flexible unit and much more full-featured and configurable than anything I have owned before. If you don't have much experience with surround sound receivers, keep the instruction manual close (tip: print it from the CD) while configuring it to suit your tastes. That's because you can configure each speaker individually, plus there are many sound field options to choose from (for both video and music environments). You can literally fiddle with settings for hours because there are so many options. I know I did!
One thing I noticed is that in the reviews here, a couple of people were having trouble getting the sound the way they liked it. As it turns out they didn't know about the bass and treble controls that are accessible on the front panel of the unit. Here's how to use the bass and treble controls: Look for the small "tone control" button on the front panel. This selects bass or treble. Then use the "program" left and right arrow buttons, directly to the right of the "tone control" button, to adjust bass and treble to your preference. I used these bass and treble controls to set a "baseline" desired frequency output, then I tweaked them slightly using the individual channel EQ settings. Worked like a charm. What you'll find is that the individual channel EQ settings work off of whatever your bass and treble are set at. Out of the box, the bass and treble are preset at 0 (i.e. totally flat), so your EQ settings don't have much to vary up and down with. I was having doubts about the sound quality of the receiver until I realized it had these bass and treble settings to give the EQ settings something to work with.
As you'll note from the pictures on this product page, there are plenty of inputs, 4 HDMI inputs and one HDMI out being the primaries. The remote is a bit of a pain, with probably too many buttons, but I run everything off a universal remote anyway, so I don't have any issues there.
Once I got things tweaked the way I wanted them, this receiver delivered the goods. My speakers never sounded so good, except for the center channel (which was an old bookshelf speaker that I had lying around). Once I realized just how bad the Yamaha made the center speaker sound, I bought a REAL center channel speaker, the Polk Audio CS10 Center Channel Speaker. That made all the difference in the world.
Music sounds fine as well, and as I hinted at before, there are several sound field options for music listening. Since many of the sound fields are quite heavy on echo, when listening to music I tend to just set it to "5 channel stereo" mode, which sounds best to me. Your mileage may vary. However, I have not tested the tuner capabilities if this unit. I detest commercial radio, and have over 500 albums in my music collection, so I'm not likely to take the radio tuner for a test drive anytime soon.
My Blu-ray movies look just as good passed through the receiver as they did when I originally had the player directly connected to the HDTV. I only have 720p though; but from what I have read in other reviews here 1080p is passed through just fine as well.
I stream Netflix to my Blu-ray player over WiFi, and the Yamaha processes the sound nicely. Note that Netflix only streams in two-channel stereo, not 5.1, so you may like your Netflix audio processed as 2-channel or 5-channel stereo. However, I usually just keep my receiver on 5.1 at all times when not listening to music, and Netflix still sounds just fine.
The Yamaha also runs cooler than any other amp I have ever owned. I don't know if that's because it's engineered to generate less heat or because there's better heat dissipation built into the unit, but I've run it all day and the top vents barely feel warm. Impressive!
In summary, this is a good lower-end unit. It's not for audiophiles, but perfect for someone building their first quality surround-sound system. For the price, I would imagine this system is hard to beat.
9 of 9 found the following review helpful:
Simple is MUCH Better Dec 03, 2010
By MWebb This is my third AV receiver. I haven't been upgrading to go from 5.1 to 7.1 or to add competing (to Dolby) surround sound systems. I haven't been upgrading to improve sound quality (most major line receivers have been "musical" for years, if not "audiophile" quality).
Nope, just wanted to kill all the cables and confusion.
Thanks to HDMI and this simple receiver, I have done that.
All my devices now (well almost all, still have an old Mac Mini with VGA!) are HDMI out. That means one thin cable carries the audio AND visual channels. The receiver then splits the audio and visual - audio is pumped out from the receiver to the speakers, video is sent to the flatscreen.
So to switch BOTH video and audio, all I have to do is select input (output is always the same, a single cable to the flatscreen).
Plus, the horrible audio sound effects built into this and other AV receivers - various degrees of reverb and fake surround sound - are refreshingly easy to process. Just set sound to "Straight" and no effects are added, you just get stereo from CD's and surround from DVD's. (Unless you have a surround encoded CD?)
I hooked up Apple TV, Roku, Blu Ray, and the Mac Mini.
Ok I left out the Mac Mini. If you have a legacy VGA/audio out device, this receiver can handle digital OR RCA outputs for sound. Then you run the VGA cable to the flatscreen. This puts you back in the dark ages of resetting the flatscreen for inputs (HDMI or VGA, in this case) and choosing the audio input. But it's not too hard on the receiver at least - just left or right arrows to cycle through your 4 possible HDMI sources then several audio sources. In the case of the Mac Mini, is has a "mini" stereo jack - one plug for both left and right channels - and this receiver thankfully has a "mini" stereo jack input (on the front). Which is also good if you want to pump in an MP3 player or iPod from the headphones jack.
There is no Apple connector or USB in.
Price is terrific for the ability to run a good surround sound system and clean out a LOT of surplus cables.
FYI running through HSU Labs speakers and subwoofer. Good bang for the buck.
See all 66 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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