Onkyo TX-NR5008 review

Onkyo has updated its flagship AV receiver for the 3D generation. We look for refinement amid the metal mayhem

Onkyo TX-NR5008
Onkyo has updated its AV reciever for the 3D generation

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Setting up shop

Room calibration is achieved via a small supplied pyramid mic, using Audyssey 2EQ algorithms. In my experience, these systems tend to have unpredictable results, but are usually worth a shot. The AVR pulses out test tones so that the room response can be analysed. The number crunching employed here is actually very good.

Onkyo tx-nr5008

This is not a Night mode. Unless you're very fortunate and have a totally isolated cinema, I'd wager it's unlikely you'll be listening at Reference level too often, so it's worth switching this on as standard.

One of the big surprises offered by this Big Onk is Neural post processing, of which there are two variants: Neural Digital Music and Neural Surround. The former is designed to take two-channel compressed audio and expand it out to whatever multichannel configuration you're running. Neural Surround does much the same for uncompressed sources.

Developed by THX and now owned by DTS, Neural Surround also allows broadcasters to transmit high-quality multichannel via low-bitrate, two channel. Putting aside its role as an encode/decode tool, I found it astonishingly effective doing post-processing duties on twochannel source material.

The stereo track Seraphim, by Digitonal (a Studio Masters release by Linn Records) gained space and scale using Neural Surround processing. A FLAC 970kbps 24bit/44.1kHz recording, the needlesharp electronica curled gorgeously around my listening position.

Obviously, not everything works as well. Beethoven's Fifth (Studio Masters Linn Records) just didn't need to be posted about the room in the same way. The AVR preferred this FLAC (2496kbps 24bit/96kHz) recording in its original stereo format, and I agreed.

Similarly, the title cut from Steve Steven's Flamenco.A.Go. Go. (DTS DVD-Audio) ended up having half the band dumped in the rear channel. But the mode scores more hits than misses and is well worth playing with.

Steve May
Home entertainment AV specialist

Steve has been writing about AV and home cinema since the dawn of time, or more accurately, since the glory days of VHS and Betamax. He has strong opinions on the latest TV technology, Hi-Fi and Blu-ray/media players, and likes nothing better than to crank up his ludicrously powerful home theatre system to binge-watch TV shows.