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NAD's T775 AV receiver ignores brochure specs and focuses on meaningful goals instead. It delivers real-world sonics and power, pristine, non-degraded video, genuinely ergonomic design, and progressive features like the uniquely enhanced Audyssey auto set-up and calibration.
"The NAD's overall sound and 'feel' remind me of results that, in the past, I've only been able to achieve with very costly, separate, high-end A/V controllers and multichannel amps," reports Chris Martens in The Perfect Vision magazine for February 17, 2010.
The T775 proudly upholds NAD's "Music First" design philosophy, which declares that state-of-the-art music recordings remain the truest test of any playback system. NAD's belief that home-entertainment products have grown far too complex and user-unfriendly also guided the T775 to its simpler, more intuitive user interface.
All input circuitry is contained on five easily removable plug in cards. Although this construction technique is more costly to implement, it offers several important advantages, including the speed with which new technology can be delivered, an upgrade path for older units, and a simple method of servicing your component in the field.
NAD has developed a unique new (MDC) architecture that keeps pace with the fast changing world of digital formats by allowing connectivity and feature upgrades as new technology becomes available. This prevents premature obsolescence by keeping pace with the latest developments in high performance audio and video formats.
Dealer-installed hardware and software can add new connectivity and features at a future date, allowing your NAD component to grow as your needs and tastes develop.
NAD's MDC upgrade modules give you high-definition surround sound decoding, video transcoding to HDM, and many other features.
Utilizing the latest HDMI 1.3 chips from Analog Devices all resolutions (480, 576, 720 and 1080) are supported. Analog inputs are "cross-converted" to HDMI ,and HDMI sources preserve their original resolutions up to 1080p, so you know you are getting the purest audio and video performance.
NAD eschews the chip-based video-DSP "upscaling" that looks so attractive in competitors' brochures, but which frequently result in video indistinguishable from, or actually inferior to, the original source.
The T775 features NAD's extensive new on-screen menu/display system via all video outputs, including HDMI, permitting a single-cable link to the video display. Additionally, it adds even more functionality with audio processing and On-Screen-Display.
Using the supplied microphone, Audyssey Auto Setup automatically performs all speaker settings. NAD's proprietarily enhanced Audyssey MultEQ XT technology enables home theatres to sound the way they were intended in every seat by removing the distortion caused by room acoustics.
The Audyssey Auto Setup and Room Calibration functions on NAD's A/V receivers and preamp exploit today's extraordinarily powerful yet affordable digital signal processing (DSP) to improve real-world sound reproduction. Audyssey auto setup employs the supplied calibrated microphone; simply locate the microphone at the listening position and engage the Audyssey system via a single remote-control key. The NAD A/V receiver or preamp automatically detects the connected loudspeaker layout, verifies correct connections, selects ideal crossover points, and adjusts each speaker's level and delay with precision that would be difficult or impossible to duplicate by ear alone.
NAD's proprietarily enhanced Audyssey MultEQ XT technology, the latest in digital sophistication, enables home theaters to sound the way they were intended in every seat by removing the distortion caused by room acoustics. Using the calibration microphone to "hear" your room, a series of test tones measure the speakers' response and the room's distorting acoustic reflections independently, and then calculates an ideal response that minimizes the effects of these reflections.
Dialogue intelligibility is dramatically improved, precise imaging and sound stage are enhanced and the accurate localization of instruments for musical balance is optimized. While this sounds simple, the digital technology that is required for this level of performance would have cost many thousands of dollars just a few short years ago.