What Audyssey adds is the dynamic EQ which often feels artificial but unlike a lot of tweaks actually doesn’t annoy you over time. MultEQ-X is supposed to let you control the aggressiveness of the dynamic EQ as well.
Audyssey also juices up the surround volume in this mode which has pros and cons. I am not sure how configurable that is with the MultEQ-X.
That’s not a part of HTP-1’s loudness feature.
Such is life when you need to make a product that works with speakers that might have 86 to 92 db/2.83V efficiency, amplifiers that have a wide range of gain, and rooms of different sizes.
I mean this is SOTA. It’s the highest performing AV processor tested here.
1) 21 channels of analog outs. This allows you to have 4 subs and 17 speakers configured to allow the different layouts for Atmos vs DTS:X.
2) 21 channels of EQ
3) HDMI 8k switching with reliable CEC support
4) HEOS streaming
5) Phono amp
6) One box, where electrical environment is tougher
7) 5 year warranty, made in Japan.
8) Bass management for 15 channels and four subs (Audyssey SubEQ)
9) Dolby/DTS/Auro
MiniDSP Flex HT 8 ch with Dirac: $850 x3
HDFury 8k VRRoom: $550 x2
WiiM Pro: $150
Phono: $100
Dolby/DTS/Auro: $1000
$4900 and it probably doesn’t work as well as one box, made in Japan.
The HTP-1 at $4000 is a better value unless you specifically need something from the Marantz in its current state.
It’s definitely overpriced unless you specifically need 15.4 support *and* you believe it’s getting Dirac ART (where you gets do a 15.1 with MSO). Where I see this primarily being used is the Best Buy/Magnolia AV scenario where it’s an upsell over the A1H and cheaper than the McIntosh processors they sell where the customer is not super tech savvy and doesn’t want to step into the true custom integrator world. It is my understanding that Magnolia sells a surprisingly high number of premium priced products from B&W, McIntosh, Mark Levinson where you might otherwise expect the customer to be going to a dedicated audio shop.
The other thing is that I think it was
@Buckeye Amps who bought a Trinnov, had problems, and then had to move to Storm. So even at the premium price points, there can be configuration challenges.
Now that the AV10 has been measured and it does NOT seem to beat the HTP-1 at lower output voltages, I think people in the sub $10k price point have to ask what the HTP-1 is missing for their needs.
That $3000 difference buys a nicer TV, some bigger subs, or some better speakers. On the other hand, if “perfect” HDMI CEC is worth the extra $3000, then it’s a different story.
When you factor in the sale prices on both processors, then the delta is about $2K.