Brand | Denon |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, HDMI |
Controller Type | Vera, Amazon Alexa |
Special Feature | Pandora, Equalizer, Spotify |
Compatible Devices | Smartphone, Speaker |
Connector Type | HDMI |
Audio Output Mode | Surround |
Surround Sound Channel Configuration | 7.2 Channel, 7 Channel |
Color | Black |
Item Weight | 18.7 Pounds |
Denon AVR-S750H 7.2 CH 165 Watts High Performance 4K Ultra HD AV Receiver with HEOS, Apple Airplay, Google Assist and Amazon Alexa Voice Command
£386.35
About this item
- Works with Alexa for voice control (Alexa device sold separately)
- Powerful 7 Channel discrete amplifier. Featuring high current discrete power output devices on all channels, the avr s730h delivers high power and is rated at a maximum of 165 watts per Channel
- HEOS wireless multi room music streaming, controlled by free HEOS app
- Wide Array of music streaming services. The HEOS app puts multiple streaming services in the Palm of your hand, ready to play on your AVR or any devices on your HEOS network
- High resolution audio decoding with multiple lossless file types including ALAC, FLAC and WAV at up to 24 bit/196 kHz along with compatibility for 2.8/5.6 MHz DSD files
Frequently Bought Together
£5.62
3 reviews for Denon AVR-S750H 7.2 CH 165 Watts High Performance 4K Ultra HD AV Receiver with HEOS, Apple Airplay, Google Assist and Amazon Alexa Voice Command
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– Kennedy Berge
First of all, I want to watch BluRay movies with great sound. I don’t care about apps, wireless, streaming, painting the bathroom, flying in space, catching bluebirds or making hamburgers on the receiver. I just want great sound. Well, I had a $2000 Onkyo that I was using in my home theater with Martin-Logan speakers. Sound was good as long as you loved subtitles because the dialog was unintelligible most of the time. So I bought this Denon, and, since we just wanted to watch a movie one night, I hooked it up and just started the movie. I didn’t go through the microphone-aided setup to calibrate the receiver for the room. I didn’t mess with the multiple band EQ per speaker, balance levels, or anything else. Just hooked it up, plugged it in, and turned it on. It totally blew away the $2000 Onkyo! The sound was amazing, the dialog was clear, and the 7.1 functioned perfectly with great space and panning. Great receiver.
– Dr. Hattie Paucek V
This is my second Denon home theatre receiver, the first I bought in 2010, and it still works fine, but given I needed something to sit in between my LG OLED55B7, and my AppleTV 4K, I needed something a bit more modern.I’m glad to say that device interoperability has improved over the years. An HDMI cable from this receiver’s output to the ARC enabled input of my TV allowed PCM multichannel sound to flow back into the receiver, and gave superpowers to my TV’s remote. I can wake up the receiver, control the volume, and even drive the interface of my AppleTV all through HDMI. Similarly, the volume buttons on the Siri remote just worked, and waking up my AppleTV wakes up the other two.Setup, was easy. I unhooked the cables coming out of my receiver, and plugged them into this. I have my own tripod, so using the calibration mic was easy.One issue is that the AppleTV did not detect 4K support via the Cable/Satellite HDMI input, but did work with the Blu-ray input.I’m driving a 5.1 setup, and have no plans to put in more speakers, so the 7.2 support is somewhat of a waste.This receiver has an Ethernet port, and immediately got an over the Internet update to allow DTS-X, which will be great if I ever get a Blu-ray player.The new version of tvOS allows for matching output to a video sources frame rate and HDR settings, such as Dolby Vision, and the receiver passes this all through well, although the seconds of switchover time is annoying (presumably this is more of a TV thing).In general, this receiver does everything I need it to do well. It does a lot, I don’t need, but given the affordable price, I can’t say that’s a waste.
– Georgette Osinski
I’ve had this unit for a few months now and am pretty happy with it. I like the price, the power, the wide range of formats supported, the HDMI, etc. All the latest bells and whistles you might want or need. My only disappointment is that I cannot get it to see my NAS, which is where all my media resides. I’m reasonably certain this is not the fault of the Denon, but it sure seems to be unreasonably difficult to accomplish. I hooked up a Roku to the same router and had no trouble accessing the NAS. Sadly, I’m not a networking wizard, so I’ll keep bumbling around the net trying to find a solution. Meanwhile, though, I do like the sound and flexibility of this Denon (my third now). I have it connected to a suite of Axiom speakers and find that listening to Blu-Ray audio disks in 5.1 surround is a true treat for the ears. Really a great value in receivers overall.