Panasonic SA-XR55S A/V Receivers

Panasonic SA-XR55S A/V Receivers 

DESCRIPTION

  • 100 Watts per channel
  • Digitally-tuned AM/FM Tuner
  • Convenient terminals
  • Rear Audio Inputs
  • Rear Video Inputs
  • Selectable DSP modes

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-9 of 9  
[Oct 22, 2006]
stimuli
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Deep, tight, amazingly precise bass.
Clear, transparent mids.
Pristine, spatial detailed.

No fan, inky black silences, inexpensive entry to the world of Equibit amplifiers.

Weakness:

Out of the box, this amp sounds terrible. Requires tweaking of speaker settings to sound 'normal.' Remote is a cheap POS. Avoid analogue inputs, stick to digital. Ugly to look at... Panasonic, whatever happened to the XR10?

I strongly suspect the reviewers below who are disastisfied with the "shrill, thin" sound of the XR55 had the speakers set to "small" (default) and/or subwoofer set to "on." Either one will set the speakers to small and cut off all frequencies below ~120hz, robbing the system of bass.

The bass on these digital Panny amps is immense, vice-like, and deep. The highs are very detailed, and the mids are neutral and transparent. Unnervingly so.

I've had the pleasure of hearing these amps though both Polk floorstanders and more recently, Ascend CBM-170s and can say without a doubt the previous paragraph is true. I recommend to anyone looking for an amp in the $200-2000 price bracket to give these Panny amps a listen... all the hype in the audio world about the Equibit amps is not for nothing.

And please, set the speakers to "large" before doing any listening. And make sure after doing this that subwoofer is set to "off." I've also had luck replacing the power cord (Audioquest NRG-1), and have found powerbars with EMI/RFI filtering tighten the sound up further as well. YMMV.

Similar Products Used:

XR45, XR25, heard the Tact Millenium.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
[Apr 05, 2006]
donpablo
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

price and feature set

Weakness:

the sound is lacking in stereo which is the most important thing in a receiver

Just terrible in stereo.
Didn’t try in home theater
Based on the review from edster on this site I decided to pick up one of these units from J and R.
My babe and I took a day trip down to J and R music world located at 2 park row in NYC. The whole area was surprisingly crowded for a Saturday afternoon with many tourists. My babe was only too happy to go along because I promised her that I would spend the equivalent amount of money on her clothes shopping that I spent on stereo.
Hence the search for inexpensive but good components!
The audio department is located on the second floor. A salesman greeted us and I told him what I wanted to see. He asked me if I had heard digital amps before and I told him no. He suggested something else but I wanted to see and hear the Panasonic sa-xr55.
The room it's located in has rows of receivers on one-side and speakers pairs on the opposite side of the room.
I asked him if we could listen to a couple of homemade burned cds we had brought along for the occasion. On them was some salsa for my babe and my collection of rock and pop from the seventies eighties and nineties.
First up was a new pair of JBL speakers played through the Panasonic.
Holy cow the sound was terrible. Really bad. Shrill with no bass and thin.
I thought it was the speakers and asked the salesman if we could hear it through some Polk speakers that were on display. Same results
The salesman then had us listen to the same jbls and Polks through some analog receivers from hl, denon, onkyo and Sony. All of them made the speakers sing in comparison to the Panasonic.
I didn’t buy it.
I went home and did a goggle on this unit and staring reading the reviews.
All, well not all but a majority of them state exactly what I heard at J and R.
That this unit is terrible in stereo.
All the reviews except the ones from this guy EDSTER.
He’s posting a very similar review throughout the Internet. Stating how good this unit is and making the innuendo that every other review is from a hater.
This guy is or must be a hack for Panasonic.
DONT BELIEVE THE HYPE.
Go listen for yourself.

Similar Products Used:

sony
denon
onkyo
yamaha

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
2
[Mar 29, 2006]
Edster922
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

UNBELIEVABLE pricepoint for this kind of sound quality! Save your money for better speakers, or a good SVS/Hsu subwoofer if you're into HT.

Precise, tightly controlled bass.

Stunning clarity and detail in the mids and treble.

Zero noise floor and distortion, regardless of volume level.

Ability to tri-amp bi-wireable speakers in 2-channel stereo.

Sleek, compact form factor should score lots of WAF (Wife Approval Factor) points.

Weakness:

If you have "bright" speakers to begin with (Klipsch, Axiom, Athena, JBL, itty bitty little satellites like Athena Point 5s, etc. that have an exaggerated high end) this speaker's ruler-flat frequency response will make them sound even brighter since it lacks the treble roll-off that most analog receivers have. Best with "warm" (Polk LSi, Alegria Audio) or neutral speakers (Ascend Acoustics).

50% of owners report problems with 4-ohm speakers, 50% do not.

Poor remote & convoluted owner's manual.

Audiophool snobs will scoff at it simply because of the nameplate and pricing, LOL what can you expect from suckas who buy $200/foot magic hoodoo cables?

(The following is from my review on the ecoustics.com forum but you can also do a search for this model at the much bigger avsforum.com to read the massively positive feedback this receiver has won.)

Initial impressions:

1. I'd be lying if I said the Panny were as warm as my Marantz 5400 or NAD separates, but on the other hand I didn't find it "harsh," "cold," "flat," "lifelessly analytical" etc. as many anti-pure-digital audio folk have claimed. "Precise" and "neutral" would be how I'd describe it.

2. Yes, the pure-digital fans are correct about the amazing lack of noise/distortion and the jaw-dropping detail of the mids and highs. Yes, I noticed many more subtle background sounds and textures than I ever did with analog equipment.

I haven't hooked up my DVD player to it since I bought it strictly for 2-channel music but this kind of meticulous detail should be ideal for HT, one would think.

3. The Panny made me doubly appreciate the intuitive ease of use I enjoyed with my old Onkyo and current Marantz. Both setup and manual are rather convoluted. You cannot use the remote to change the setup, for one thing...argh!

4. The Panny certainly has no shortage of power...its volume goes from silent at -79 and maxes out at 0, I was easily hitting 80db at -40 and not the slightest hint of distortion. I am very curious to hear how it sounds when I get some extra speaker cable and bi-amp my Ascends, a very handy feature that I had only seen on the Pioneer Elite series in the $700 and up range.

5. The Panny doesn't provide quite the same heavy thumping bass of the NAD, nor the aggressive fullness that the NAD achieves at high volumes (+80db)...it seems to have more of an intricate and laid-back personality.

7. Cosmetics. I wasn't crazy about the small, crude-looking LED display which reminded me of my $65 Panasonic DVD player's display but oh well this is a $228 receiver after all. Otherwise the simple black faceplate is pretty tasteful. Should score some WAF (Wife Approval Factor) brownie points for any guy who decides to keep it. The remote is indeed a cheap POS but still a pretty minor gripe at this price.

****

After several days of listening only to the Panny, today I finally started doing some A/B listening with the Panny vs. my beloved NAD...and the "aha" moments are coming in spades right now.

Started with some Bach: a solo piano piece ("Jesu Joy of Man's Desiring") and the Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G Major (Allegro). The piano piece had both receivers pretty close at moderate volumes, though I could already hear a clarity advantage in favor of the Panny, which simply sounded more open and natural.

However at high volumes (90-95db) and particularly on the violin concerto, the Panny simply WIPED THE FLOOR with the NAD, which started to get thin on the highs and weak on the mids during musical peaks, with a layer of fuzz settling in around the edges. The Panny on the other hand calmly delivered the goods with perfect aplomb, didn't even get hot to the touch, stayed the same warmish temperature to the touch throughout.

Moved on to Norah Jones, "Don't Know Why" and "Seven Years"---didn't crank the volume above 80db this time, but again the Panny held a clear advantage. Wow, the midrange was just tremendous...Norah's voice seemed much fuller, her breaths more audible, when she held a note for a couple of seconds it all came through clear and effortlessly. In comparison the NAD seemd to favor certain parts of the frequency range over others, Norah's voice while still very pleasing did not have the same range.

Van Morrison, "Moondance"---a mediocre recording, but again the Panny did it with a bit more life and verve than the NAD.

Santana, "Put Your Lights On," "Maria Maria," and "Corazon Espinado." This is one of my favorite demo CDs because the songs have a variety of tempos and both simple and complex passages. There is also a lot of treble and midrange happening at the same time, all driven by a strong beat.

Once again, during complex passages (by which I mean lots of instruments, voices, percussion all happening at the same time) the Panny pulled ahead and never looked back. Separation of musical inputs was outstanding, bringing out many details that were muted on the NAD.

The NAD clearly does deliver more bass (I had my speakers set on large on the Panny, with the sub turned off) and on simpler compositions did have more of a laid back, warmish sound. However at about six times the price (an equivalent NAD amp + pre-pro today would run about $1300 compared to the Panny's $230) that's a lot of dough just for a particular sound characteristic with a particular type of musical compositions. In fact if I were buying my system from scratch today, I would choose the Panny without a second thought over both the NAD and the Marantz and spend the extra money on the speakers and sub...complete no-brainer.

What particularly surprised me was the fact that the slim featherweight Panny actually seems far more powerful than the behemoth NAD in both SPL and maintaining SQ at high SPL. It is rated at 100wpc at 6 ohms, but after today I would guesstimate that they could easily list it at 150wpc at 8ohms if they wanted to and they'd still be far more honest than 90% of their competition. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend this receiver even as a party appliance.

Wow, wow, wow..a 230 lousy bucks suddenly goes a VERY long way, indeed!

This Panny is far from perfect in terms of componentry, features, remote, and ease of use no doubt---but the performance it delivers at this ridiculously low pricepoint is simply staggering. If Panny adds another say $200 to the price tag to give it higher grade features and components, it will be extremely hard to beat.

Simply put, I cannot imagine there being too many solid-state analog receivers around 10 years from now, other than the real high end die-hard audiophile niche.

Customer Service

N/App

Similar Products Used:

Onkyo LR-552
Marantz 5400
NAD separates
Onkyo 601

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Feb 08, 2006]
changeling93305
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

lots of features, panasonic's sound fields are very nice, the live and rock pop, dance hall all are very different and enjoyable , it is small and light, and has a ton of features, the setup was genuinely user friendly and easy, so basically the bells and whistles are it's strong point, but then again all receivers nowerdays have a bunch of features what they lack is sound quality, just for the record my next receiver that is on it's way is a vintage 1978 era mint marantz receiver scored from ebay for 150 bucks, my forray into multi chanel surround has ended with this piece for now , however if you only use this receiver for movie viewing you may enjoy it's clear accurate sound, but it will not do your favorite record justice at all

Weakness:

the bass is slighty below average, sound is anemic , remember the austin powers movie where he lost his mojo, this receiver much like austin powers has lost its mojo whether that is from the design of an all digital amp , or just because this is an overall mediochre design i am not certain. I did describe a quality issue as well and i suspect that digital amps are more senstive and delicate than traditional amps

this is the third receiver that i have tried out in the last month, for many years i used a jvc 2-channel rx-309 which for the money was a nice little receiver, but of course the grass is greener on the other side so it was time to get somthing better. I am a big time music listener , home theatre would be a nice extra bonus for me, but not the focal point of me buying a receiver, i had heard about panasonic's "all digital amp" hyped as being the wave of the future a highly efficient ultra clear sonic experience, so i decided to give it a try i hooked it up and the first thing i noticed was the power was modest but honest, it is listed at 100 watts and it sounds like 100 watts , there is a big problem with receivers lately boasting of high power and NOT delivering on it. Now onto the nature of it's sound, it sounds a bit bright and it sounds like it has a bit of "reverb" that echo'ish kinda quality which is nice in way , but as i listened to it more i found that there was somthing "lacking" in the sound , there is a richness a fullness that is absent from this amp that even cheap receivers like my JVC seem to have, i call it character music should have a "feel" to it, some character that extra it factor that makes it sound vital, and this amp clearly lacks that and i was warned from certain reviewers ( that i thought were just haters) that this receiver is guilty of those flaws, now onto it's mechanical problems, when i turned it off (stand by mode) it produced a fairly loud humming tone sound which i found highly offensive i unplugged it and plugged it in later and it went away for awhile then came back, later i tried some different speakers and as i was putting a wire in the think sparked and smoked and emmitted an acrid smell , all this within the first 4 hours of use, so needless to say i did not get it fixed i just returned it for a refund, however my rating is based on performance in working condition, this amp qualitfies for a 3 when it (if) works

Similar Products Used:

harmon kardon HK3 receiver (good sound but lacks power) sony str receiver( basic entry level) jvc RX 309 receiver ( overachiever at it's modest price range) on a parting note i would like to comment on user reviews, they are what influenced me to buy alot of products so it was a disapointment to read good reviews about this receiver, but it is all about perspective , i am not an audiophile but i am on a quest to get the best avalible sound i can possibly get or close to it for the 300$ price range, for me that means dabbling in the second hand market , compared to other other new receivers in this price range there are better alternatives i am sure, but i can't with authority name them for sure, entry level yamaha's and pioneers were my plan B and C

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
2
[Nov 10, 2005]
pabx11
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Feature set digital maps lightweight good for home theater

Weakness:

digital maps lightweight bad for music

I recently moved to a mini apartment in manhattan, so I sold my HK AVR7300 and auditioned some mini-receivers to match up with my athena .5 mk2 mini speakers system. The contenders; 1- Onkyo TX-LR552 from Ubid 2- PANASONIC SA-XR55S from J&R 3- HK AVR135 from HK online via ebay 1-First up the Onkyo TX-LR552 purchased from UBID. It was a refurb with a 1 yr warranty and a rip of cost of $25 for s&h. It was defective out of the box. The volume control skiped up and down in unequal increments if used manually. The sound was very good. The feature set very good and the remote excellent. The remote was the best of the three. The seller UBID was the WORST of the three, probably of all time. They wanted to charge me 15% to return the defective unit they had sent me. What a rip off! I wont be buying from them again. 2- Next up the PANASONIC SA-XR55S from J&R music world. Good price at $239.00. 100 % functional out of the box. Great feature set. The remote ok. The sound was the worse of the three units. Absolutely terrible. Thats my opinion, its a digital amp and to me it sounded very sharp and shrilly in all modes. Lifeless and flat, Definetly not what I want to listen to after a hard day at work. 3- The HK AVR135 refurb purchased from HK online via ebay w 2 yr warranty. 100 % functional out of the box. The sound was great, number 1 in this group and far better then the other two. The feature set excellent but the remote dead last. The remote was the worst in this group. The seller is excellent and mantains an excellent rating on ebay. Final rating 1-The HK AVR 135 is an awesome sounding little receiver for the money and the one I kept. 2- the technics sa xr55 wonderful feature set and easy to use and set up. Sounded good for home theater but terrible for listening to music. 3- Last was the Onkyo. Just a terrble experience with the seller, UBID, compounded the functionality problems. The Onkyo would have placed a close second but theres no forgiving a non working unit. I work too hard for my money to throw it away. The seller, UBID IS THE WORST. Its like legalized robbery on the internet. I would not recomend them to anyone for anything. I now have to spend more money to send the unit in for repair.

Similar Products Used:

hk avr 135 Onkyo TX-LR552 pioneet elite ex 500

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
3
[Nov 09, 2005]
wineau
AudioPhile

Strength:

Incredible resolution, power, musicality at this or much higher price points! Sounds fantastic! (Friends have described dropped jaws very well).

Weakness:

Come on, for $230 this is a no brainer! Could we use palladium connectors? At this price forget it! It sounds great!

I am reviewing this amp as a 2 channel high performance amp, not as a HT 7 channel amp. This amp apparently replaces the SA-XR50. And replace it nicely it does! I have had the SA-XR10, and SA-XR50 for some time. Both are fantastic amps, but with drawbacks for audiophiles. One key thing is the speaker connectors; the XR10 has only spring connectors. The XR50 has bananas for the front channels. The XR55 has a whole row of banana (5 way) connectors for all the speakers. Better yet, the amp has a bi-amp feature which allows you to bi-amp your speakers with separate amps for high and low frequencies (if your speakers allow). And I can tell you the Bi-Amp thing is brilliant, it works and if you have bi-wireable speakers (the Infinity Beta 50's work great) you will love it. Kudos to Panasonic for offering an audiophile feature at this product level!

Similar Products Used:

All manner of amplification, won't mention the high end names this little amp smoked! Try and believe!

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Oct 31, 2005]
abstracta
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

2-channel sound quality and power capabilities well outside it's price class by miles. Absurd performance/price ratio, and the positive reviews on the XR55's digital amp are not hype and the real deal. Easy to use multifuntion knob perfect for less than techie significant others. Likey to be ignored by a burgular because it looks like a betamax VCR.

Weakness:

Somewhat whimpy speaker connectors and interconnects. Mediocre but useable FM tuner. Lacks fancy DSP modes of other more expensive A/V units. No HDMI switching.

I've owned my XR55 for a few months now, and frankly consider it the best hi-fi purchase I've ever made. I needed an easy to use A/V box because my significant other hated fiddling with my matching B&K seperates, and the glowing reviews of the XR55's straight music qualities sold me. I was not dissapointed when I turned it on. I auditioned several $500+ A/V receivers including Pioneer, Yammy, and the whole lot, and while I found most of them offered more sophisticated multi-channel options, none touched the XR55's digital amp in terms of stereo mode. As per the review below, the clarity and linear nature of the integrated digital amp stage is very evident when you first power up the XR55, and rather startling. I woulnd't classify the sound as 'bright', but I would classify it as forward, very revealing, and with a huge soundstage. If you like a warm and laid back sound (aka sloppy), this isn't your gadget. Many of the conventional A/V receivers I listened to sounded like they were blurring over and masking details the XR55 made very clear. I'll take clarity over slop any day. This unit easily outclassed my $1000 B&K 200wpc amp with ease. The multifunction dial in front of the XR55 makes it very easy to change sources, although other competing units now have a similiar function. The digital amplifier also result in a unit that is very light (approx 9lbs), and this is difficult for typical male psychology to adjust to being we've conditioned ourselves to believe that heavy Hi-Fi equipment is good Hi-Fi equipment :-) Style wise though the XR55 follows Panasonic's trend of making the ugliest retro looking consoles next to maybe JVC. All the XR55 is lacking is a slot for an 8-track tape. The only other negative I could find was the speaker connectors and interconnects on the back are of typical $250 caliber. Otherwise, the killer sound for a A/V unit pricing less than $250 makes this a killer buy.

Similar Products Used:

B&K, Pioneer, Yammy, H&K...on and on

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Oct 28, 2005]
astrallionheart
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

- Plenty of headroom in stereo mode "dual-amp" mode. It engages an extra amp in parallel. Although power output remains roughly the same, (about 93W/channel) it can supply twice the current meaning less chance of clipping. -Loses very little power output in multichannel mode; measured at 88W/channel -Low distortion -Nearly flat power output from 20hz to 88KHz -Noise floor is incredibly low given only one D/A stage in the entire conversion process -Incredible deal at $229

Weakness:

-Not for people who prefer warm sound -Lack of HDMI support, limited inputs -Not a plug and play receiver; need to read manual and do some tweaks for a few minutes

Incredible power output, distortion free up to very high levels (tweeter hiss at 0db of -79 is comparable to that of an idle analog receiver, its VERY clean). Very detailed. Being a WPM (digital) amplifier, the power levels are flat across the frequency band, compared to declining power levels with regular analogs, meaning greater apparent volume level at equal SPLs with an analog receiver. As a result, this detail may be considered "bright" but in truth it brings out the details in music. Some people prefer their sound warmer (acoustically pleasing distortion) and this might not be the receiver for you. It also lacks HDMI switching. It's not a feature packed receiver, but this receiver is all about amplification abilities.

Similar Products Used:

Onkyo TX-SR501 Sony STR-DE597

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Sep 08, 2005]
squarewave
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

7.1 FULL DIGITAL AMPLIFICATION @ 100 watts per channel.Dual amp configuration for listening to 2 channel stereo. Best bang for the buck as far as digital receivers go. Modern good looks.

Weakness:

Big footprint(16x15) Make sure you have enough room in your entertainment center for this beast. No phono input.So,if you have a turntable that you listen to religiously,you may want to skip this one. Although this receiver is alo available in black,some people may not like the modern look and may like the whole "bulky" receiver look instead. No major weaknesses or complaints.

I have been looking for a home theater receiver to replace my old Yamaha stereo receiver for a long time.I have looked at every brand under the sun.Yamaha(I am a long time fan),Denon,Onkyo,Marantz,Harman Kardon,you name it.A friend of mine has the Panasonic SA-XR50 and could not stop talking about it.I know I know,it's a Panasonic.They make phones and all.But,what attracted me most to this receiver was the FULL digital amplification and its modern-ish looks,and for the price,you cannot find a digital amplifier that offers so much for so little. Out of the box,this is a beast of a receiver.It is as long as it is deep(16x15)My fiance said that it looked like something that came out of the 70s but when you turn this puppy on,you know that it is all modern. This receiver has all of the goodies for a great home theater experience.It has DTS 96/24,DTS-ES,NEO:6,and Dolby Pro Logic.You can also control all of the settings for each of your speakers.Subwoofer volume AND crossover levels as well.This receiver also has controls for the center channel,including width and "paronama". This receiver also has a lot of DSP modes that can are also user adjustable. The remote can control most of your audio/video equipment as well.The manual provides codes for this. As far as the sound,it is not "bright" as per other reviews of the older Panasonic digital receivers.It sounds very natural.No need for some "warm up" period with this receiver.Just plug it in,set your settings,and listen. If you have speakers that are bi-wireable,this receiver can handle them as well. As far as inputs/outputs,here's what you get: Audio Inputs/Outputs 7 in, 2 out Digital Inputs/Outputs 4 in (2 optical, 2 coaxial) Video Inputs/Outputs 5 in, 2 out S-Video Inputs/Outputs 3 in, 1 out But no phono input. This receiver also has something called a Multi Source Remaster Processor,which makes you MP3s sound more natural and more like the "live" performance.And there are 4 levels of this that you can use. This receiver also uses a dual amp configuration when listening to 2 channel stereo by using the amps dedicated to multichannel listening when listening to stereo.Stereo music sounds so much better and crisper. If you are looking to get into a DIGITAL receiver,please go to the Panasonic website and check this receiver out.I am very happy that I made this purchase and I know that this is a receiver that I will have for many,many years to come.

Similar Products Used:

None

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
Showing 1-9 of 9  

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