Denon AVR-S570BT vs Yamaha R-N2000A review

Votes 1 1
Rating 5 5

AV receivers comparison chart

Overall
Denon AVR-S570BT
5.7
Yamaha R-N2000A
7
6
9
8
inapplicable
5
inapplicable

Denon AVR-S570BT vs Yamaha R-N2000A review

Denon AVR-S570BT
vs
Yamaha R-N2000A

Denon AVR-S570BT vs Yamaha R-N2000A comparison definitely makes sense.

Amplifier

A significant difference between the receivers in the number of channels, Denon AVR-S570BT has 5.2 versus 2.1 for Yamaha R-N2000A. Regarding power, then AVR-S570BT has such a W/Ohm ratio - 70/8, 90/6 when R-N2000A has a power of 90/8, 145/4. The THD is 0.08% for the AVR-S570BT but 0.07% for the R-N2000A.

Audio features

Competitors' digital to analog converter (DAC) is identical to 192 KHz/32-bit. Only the R-N2000A supports Bi-amping feature. Each of the AV receivers can transmit an audio signal directly to the amplifier and bypasses any DSP processing. Rivals from our review have Bluetooth support. Only the R-N2000A supports Spotify. Only the AVR-S570BT provides HDMI signal transmission in standby mode. The AVR-S570BT can scale the input HDMI signal, unlike the R-N2000A. Dolby Vision technology found support only on the AVR-S570BT. Only the AVR-S570BT supports HDMI Audio Return Channel (ARC). The HDMI eARC is available only on the AVR-S570BT. Of the two receivers in our comparison, HDMI CEC is present in only the AVR-S570BT. The R-N2000A has a built-in phono stage for connecting a vinyl player. It is also worth noting that the ECO mode is presented in each of the receivers. Both AVR-S570BT and R-N2000A can be configured using the Setup assistant.

Multichannel surround

None of the rivals equipped with Dolby Atmos multichannel audio decoder. The receivers do not support the surround sound technology DTS:X.

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General

Item

Denon AVR-S570BT
Yamaha R-N2000A

Model

AVR-S570BT
R-N2000A

Brand

Denon
Yamaha

Reviews

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