Did this coupon
work for you?
work for you?
Sold By | Sale Price |
---|---|
Abt Electronics | $1999 |
Best Buy | $1999 |
Amazon | $1999 |
Product Name: | Denon AVR-X4800H 125W 9.4-Channel 8K Network AV Receiver |
Product Description: | Designed and manufactured in Japan, the powerful AVR-X4800H drives 9.4 channels of amplification. With Dolby Atmos and DTS:X, plus IMAX Enhanced and Auro 3D, the AVR-X4800H envelops larger living spaces in breathtaking 3D audio. With HEOS Built-in, wirelessly stream your favorite music. Enveloping 3D audio Feel like you're in the center of the action with enveloping 3D sound. Expert ready Take advantage of the wide variety of configuration options to best fit your space. Denon craftsmanship Designed and manufactured at Denon facilities in Japan and tuned by the Denon Sound Master. Optimize for your room Enhance performance with room correction options from Audyssey (installed) or Dirac Live (optional, with future update). Over the AVR-X3800H, the AVR-X4800H offers these features: • Extruded heatsink • Double layer chassis • Made In Japan • Bass Sync • Trap door • Triple 12v trigger • Zone 3 (audio) • Dolby Digital EX • DTS ES • And extra 8K HDMI input • A Component Analog Input • Multi-brand remote control |
Product SKU: | deavrx4800h |
The link has been copied to the clipboard.
186 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
I have to say though, this is a solid unit. Supports all the good stuff like 4K@120Hz, all of the inputs are 8K@60Hz, supports up to four subs in case you want to knock your house off its foundations, ALLM, QMS are supported on all inputs... and I have to say, I have been very impressed with the Auro-3D upmixer. Literally for the first time, I can actually tell my upfiring Atmos speakers are doing something, and you definitely notice the difference between Auro-3D and the Dolby and DTS upmix modes. I have a pretty crap room layout and the Audyssey room correction did an impressive job. Not sure if it's the 4800 or the new sub I got at the same time, or maybe a little of both, but the vocal track on everything is so much easier to hear now. I don't have to set the center channel reference volume to 4-5dB higher than everything else just to be able to make out what people are saying and I can hear little nuances in videos that I was missing before.
Only real downsides I can think of have nothing to do with the audio quality. The remote still sucks just as hard as any other remote from Denon over the past several years. If anyone has figured out how to use Alexa or Google Home to change to Game 1 or Game 2 inputs, please tell me because I cannot figure it out for the life of me--other inputs work just fine, only those two don't work. The setup UI is only a mild refinement from my old 2200W and is still pretty clunky.
For about 15 years straight, Denon receivers would go at least 50% off at Fry's (RIP).
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Kept considering the upgrade for Dolby Vision and 120hz to work through receiver... This price pushed me over the line.
Or because chip supply is finally catching up with demand?
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank FrankF7061
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Yep. I really needed to replace my x3400 and went with the $1k x3800. But I would have jumped on this one if it was an option.
Could partially be a supply chain thing. Maybe Denon is overbought on chips and is looking to move inventory, but I'm betting demand is down b/c recession. If anything, it's probably a mix of the 2
This is the one to get & easily competes with even the new Onkyo/Pioneer models IMO!
I also did but my threshold for this is/was $1200 since I use my AVR as a pre pro.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank aerogems
I have to say though, this is a solid unit. Supports all the good stuff like 4K@120Hz, all of the inputs are 8K@60Hz, supports up to four subs in case you want to knock your house off its foundations, ALLM, QMS are supported on all inputs... and I have to say, I have been very impressed with the Auro-3D upmixer. Literally for the first time, I can actually tell my upfiring Atmos speakers are doing something, and you definitely notice the difference between Auro-3D and the Dolby and DTS upmix modes. I have a pretty crap room layout and the Audyssey room correction did an impressive job. Not sure if it's the 4800 or the new sub I got at the same time, or maybe a little of both, but the vocal track on everything is so much easier to hear now. I don't have to set the center channel reference volume to 4-5dB higher than everything else just to be able to make out what people are saying and I can hear little nuances in videos that I was missing before.
Only real downsides I can think of have nothing to do with the audio quality. The remote still sucks just as hard as any other remote from Denon over the past several years. If anyone has figured out how to use Alexa or Google Home to change to Game 1 or Game 2 inputs, please tell me because I cannot figure it out for the life of me--other inputs work just fine, only those two don't work. The setup UI is only a mild refinement from my old 2200W and is still pretty clunky.