“Let our rigorous testing and reviews be your guidelines to A/V equipment – not marketing slogans”
Facebook Youtube Twitter instagram pinterest

Marantz SR-18 Receiver Preview

by December 31, 2002
Marantz SR-18

Marantz SR-18

This system set-up was furnished by Miani Audio located in Clearwater, Florida. Joe Miani, one of the store owners of Miani Audio, was nice enough to allow us the privilege to sit in one of their excellent show rooms for a few hours to demo the above mentioned A/V system.

The Marantz SR-18 is one AV  receiver with need for little introduction. It is basically a state of the art piece of hardware and one of the best all in one box home theater solutions on the market. Marantz has recently come a long way with their A/V receivers, as this powerhouse flagship best illustrates here.

Build quality of the SR-18 is second to none within its respected class. The SR-18 is endowed with a high-current toroidal transformer power supply, premium high storage, low ESR power supply capacitors, fully discrete preamp and power amp output stages, and premium 96KHz / 24 bit DAC's.

Listening Tests

Our listening tests proved the Marantz SR-18 to be a very musical, powerful and dynamic receiver. Two-channel audio sounded very composed and full, even at high volume levels. The amp never sounded strained during bass heavy transitions. Instead, it just pumped out the low frequencies with authority and clarity, yielding a very natural sounding midrange and airy, detailed, but not too bright treble. One particular characteristic of the SR-18 we have come to appreciate was the extremely low noise floor, which until this moment, we haven't found an all in one box unit which exhibited this characteristic so well since the legendary Yamaha DSP A1. We spent considerable time listening and evaluating DTS CD's on the Energy speaker system with much enjoyment and enthusiasm. The SR-18 decoded DTS CD's flawlessly and handled DPL and DD with equal prowess. In addition, bass management was done correctly for the first time in a Marantz Receiver.

User Interface

We found the user interface of the SR-18 to be the weak point of this unit. The On Screen Menus (OSM) were not intuitive at all. It took some doing just to get a darn test tone to initiate. The remote was quite impressive looking, but also not intuitive to the neophyte or experienced audio buff who desires to operate the SR-18 on the fly and is too lazy to refer to a user manual. With time and patience, the user can master this powerful remote which could potentially serve as the main user interface to the entire A/V system. This remote is light years ahead of the remote for the Denon 5700 or Yamaha DSP A1 in this regard.

Perhaps one of the biggest gripes we had about the SR-18 with respect to user friendliness, was its very lacking user manual. It was very vague in explaining system set up and operation. It furnished very little electrical specifications on the unit and what it did provide was ambiguous and incomplete. The user manual on the Yamaha DSP A1 and also the Denon 5700 are far superior in this regard.

Discrepancies on Specifications and Capabilities of the SR-18

There are a few misleading specifications regarding this receiver. The first and most important misleading specification is claimed output power ratings. The Brochure on the SR-18 claims the amps to be 140 watts RMS at full bandwidth, while the actual user manual states 140 watts RMS at 1KHz. The Denon 5700 is also marketed like this. Marantz / Denon probably rely on the fact that most consumers will not be able to assertion or at least notice these misleading power figures and hope they buy based on inflated numbers. While in actuality 140 watts RMS at 1KHz translates to about 105 - 110 watts RMS at full bandwidth. This is one fine example of how manufactures like to play games with their claimed power ratings.

While the SR-18 has these higher fidelity DAC's, they cannot be utilized with multi channel surround signals (IE. DD, DTS, etc). The user manual for the SR-18 explicitly states the following on page 31: " PCM-audio signals can be subjected to Pro Logic Processing when Fs = 32 KHz, 44.1 KHz , or 48 KHz.. However, output will be muted when 96 KHz PCM signal or DTS signal are input." What this is basically saying is anytime a 96KHz signal is subjected to multi channel processing, it will be muted. Be that as it may, ask yourself what's the significance of having 96KHz / 24 bit DAC's if they cannot be utilized for all applications which employ 96KHz audio. Marantz in not the only vendor doing this. All receivers boasting 96KHz DAC's also follow this principal as it is a limitation to the current digital interface. Logical would lead one to conclude that all current 96KHz / 24 bit Processors are marketing gimmicks at best. DVD audio, will be 192 KHz / 24 bit, is backed by a new Audio Standard, unlike 96KHz audio. DVD audio hardware and software will envelope the consumer market and lay to rest the notion of 96KHz DAC's currently supported by some manufacturers who were too impatient to wait for the new Audio Standard to be completed and finalized.

marantz_SR-18bAnother discrepancy found on the SR-18 was on its weight. As insignificant as this may sound to the average shopper, the more sophisticated shopper would consider weight of a product as a good way to judge the amount of guts in the unit (IE. Size of Power Supply, Heat Sinks, etc). The brochure on the SR-18 claims it to weigh 56.1 lbs while the user manual states it weighs 49.7 lbs (same weight as the Denon 5700). The 6.4 lbs discrepancy makes one wonder if the power supply may be smaller than one was originally lead to believe. Keep in mind that the amps in this receiver, as well as most receivers, are Class AB and utilize linear power supplies. Linear power supplies are large and bulky. A big transformer weighs a good deal, which adds considerable weight to the box. The B&K AVR 202 and Yamaha DSP A1 are the heaviest all in one box solutions on the market (55 lbs and 52 lbs respectively). Please note, we are not trying to suggest that the DSP A1 or AVR 202 are better because of this, but this fact does provide insight, in some cases, to build quality and emphasis placed on quality of parts utilized in the particular product.

Conclusion

In spite of the Marantz SR-18's shortcomings mentioned above, we feel it to be an excellent overall product for home theater applications. It ranks right up there with the B&K AVR 202, Yamaha DSP A1 and Denon 5700. Each of these fine machines have their own associated strengths and weaknesses.

Choosing which one to purchase is a function of the individuals:

  1. Applications
  2. Performance expectations
  3. Budget
  4. Preference

We felt the strong points of the SR-18 to be:

  1. Musical amp section
  2. Powerful and dynamic amp sections
  3. Excellent DPL / DD & DTS decoding
  4. Excellent, but complicated remote
  5. Digital output (1 coaxial, 1 optical)

While we felt the weak points of the SR-18 to be:

  1. Useless DSP modes
  2. User Interface
  3. User Manual
  4. Limited amount of Digital inputs (2 optical, 2 coaxial)
  5. No Phone input or preamp
  6. Sub-out inactive in 2 channel mode when main speakers are set to large.

- Reviewed by Gene, JHT, and RYT

Marantz SR-18 Follow-up

Being that there were some unanswered issues regarding technical specifications and format compatibility on the SR-18, I took the liberty to call the Marantz Engineering department directly to resolve these matters.

Tabulated below are the measured technical specifications of the Marantz SR-18:

Channels Power(RMS) Bandwidth Impedance THD
All driven simultaneously 132 watts 20Hz - 20KHz 8 ohms < .03%
Mains 140 watts

10Hz - 50KHz

10Hz - 40KHz

8 ohms

8 ohms

< .03%

< .025%

Mains 150 watts 20Hz - 20KHz 8 ohms < .02%
Mains 220 watts 20Hz - 20KHz 8 ohms < .03%
Mains 1 watt 10Hz - 200KHz
< .03%

Note1: All measurements above were taken on Audio Precision Model 1.
Note2: Low frequency bandwidth measurements were limited by the Audio Precision to 10Hz.

Dynamic Power IHF (Watts) Impedance (W)
200 8
375 4
500 2

96KHz / 24 Bit DAC's

The 96KHz/24 bit DAC's may only be utilized in 2-channel mode in spite the fact that these DAC's are supported on all channels. This is a limitation of the format, not the hardware. The same applies for all other companies which support 96KHz / 24 bit audio. In most cases, better audible results may be achieved using the internal 96KHz/24 bit DAC's of the equipped DVD player when listening to 2 channel 96KHz / 24 bit audio. The reason for this is that most DVD players will not pass a 96KHz signal out of the digital output. Those which do may not have a low enough noise floor or pass a jitter resistance free signal to audible benefit from the higher sampling rate.

Subwoofer Distorted Output Concern from Sound & Vision Magazine

The August 1999 issue of Sound & Vision Magazine reviewed the SR-18 favorably but had one concern regarding a slightly distorted subwoofer output. The reason being was when Marantz submitted the SR-18 to Sound & Vision; it was a proto unit, which did not have the hardware updates on the THX controller circuit. According to Marantz Engineering, this problem has since than been resolved and is no longer an issue.

Enjoy the Music!

 

About the author:
author portrait

Gene manages this organization, establishes relations with manufacturers and keeps Audioholics a well oiled machine. His goal is to educate about home theater and develop more standards in the industry to eliminate consumer confusion clouded by industry snake oil.

View full profile