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No hay artículos en el carroEl Yamaha R-N1000A ofrece un sonido diseñado para tu estilo de vida de escucha. Auténtica calidad Hi-Fi con compatibilidad de transmisión de música de alta resolución y conexión HDMI. Ofrece un ajuste acústico ideal sin esfuerzo con YPAO.
Pinball Lizard
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 29 de abril de 2025
It does what it's supposed to, and very well. No issues getting it on the network and it's easy to control with the app. It also sounds good with our turntable. A great improvement from our previous cobbled-together system.
Viktor Antonov
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de abril de 2025
YPAO changed my perception of the premium sound systems, now I’ve finally learned how a good sound should be balanced and how important is the volume of listening, this is definitely a life changing device. And my KEF Q350 never sounded better
Bart
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 14 de octubre de 2024
The amp sounds fantastic… but after two days, it’s going back to the seller. How does a major consumer electronics company like Yamaha manage to sell a device with such clunky, unintuitive, and downright flaky networking? It’s a mystery for the ages. Are we in the 21st century, or is it 1973, and Ethernet just has been invented? The networking (and the streaming system) is worse than a $100 no-name D-class amp from China. Honestly, Yamaha could probably hire two engineering students in Bangalore, and in one weekend, they’d build a better networking system and app than MusicCast. Why even bother including a streamer if it can’t work reliably? Just sell the amplifier and call it a day. Of course, when automated configuration fails there is a manual option - which, believe it or not, doesn’t save the settings once the system disconnects. Hilariously, after painstakingly typing in the network password using the remote, all the IP numbers for the system, the router and DNS, etc, the amp can’t even use all this info for MusicCast. To activate MC and control the amp, you’re still forced to endure the most bizarre setup: the amp switches to a strange mode in which it acts as a wireless access point, ignores your manual setup, ask for the network identification, tries to connect to the router using some unknown protocol for authentication (because, of course, you get zero input here as a user), and then… surprise! Either it works (maybe a 1 in 100 chance, I was able to connect once), or you’re met with a parade of errors that Yamaha conveniently avoids explaining in the manual or anywhere online. The funniest part? Sometimes the system actually streams music selected via MusicCast but claims after an hour or so - get this - that there’s no MusicCast device on the network, leaving you with no way to control the amp anymore. I had to physically unplug it to stop the music. When I reconnected the amp, the streaming magically resumed (yes, you read that right!!!), while MC app continued pretending the device didn’t exist. Eventually, I had to pull the plug and let the amp sit there for few minutes just to kill the stream. This feels like a college engineering project that kind of works but not well enough to ever see the light of day as a commercial device. Yet, Yamaha expects you to shell out $1700+ for this? It’s almost insulting. The kicker? A quick internet search reveals complaints about MusicCast and Yamaha setup issues dating all the way back to 2015! The audacity of selling a product this poorly designed in 2024 is just mind-blowing. Knowing how badly R-N1000A has been executed, I certainly do not plan to try any other new streaming Yamaha amps. The old ones are great, as they do not have any digital stuff that is clearly beyond Yamaha’s engineers’ comprehension, and ability to implement.
M. Adsit
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 16 de diciembre de 2023
So, this Yamaha network receiver replaced a Denon 7.2 receiver here which delivered 80 watts/channel and is paired with KEF Q350 speakers, speakers I have loved. Now I love them a whole lot more! Planning an upgrade to those speakers to the KEF Meta R3s and this receiver should handle those 4 ohm gems well too. There is bigger soundstage and much greater detail especially in the mid- and low-ranges from this Yamaha. The clarity is astonishing versus the Denon's comparatively hazy delivery. Build quality is also a step-up. Airplay, Tidal Connect and Net Radio are all well-implemented and there's a high quality DAC delivering excellent detail and low noise whether that be with FLAC, ALAC or lower-res sources. The aesthetic may be a bit 1980s when compared to the competition from Carver, NAD and Adcom (I also auditioned those) but they cannot beat the sound nor the features at the price. I did not find the YPAO room correction added anything of value and have it turned off - your results may vary. No need here for the tone controls either and run it strictly in Pure Direct mode. Again: astonishing clarity and detail, big soundstage, nice feature set well-implemented and excellent build quality. Amazon is offering it at the best price I could find, another win! Highly recommended!
Missy2018
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de noviembre de 2023
I’ve had my R-N1000A for nearly a month now and all I can say is wow! Having a dedicated two channel amp with this kind of power makes my JBL L100’s sing, with clear separation of the instruments, crisp highs and tight lows. I have the black version and love the retro looks, copying the Yamaha integrated amps of the 70’s. The MusicCast app easily controls this amp and streaming music through it is fantastic! I also play mostly vinyl and the phono stage on this unit is top notch for mm carts.The other inputs and features, like pre outs for a separate amp (which I use) are just icing on the cake.And, after running it for hours, it barely gets warm.Highly recommend!
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