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Home Theater / June 2003  •  www.hometheatermag.com

Harman/Kardon AVR 325 A/V Receiver

G E A R   G U I D E

that 5.1 channels are plenty for

most home theaters. Still, even I

must admit that adding two rear

speakers to the mix will allow

your system to cover a large, wide

space more evenly. Besides, you

could always trade the extra chan-

nels for higher volume and better

dynamics by running a 7.1-channel

model in 5.1 mode, without the

rear speakers. My favorite number

is 5.2. Please forgive the digres-

sion, but, once you’ve heard your

system with two subwoofers, you’ll

never want to go back.

Not afraid of the

merry-go-round

of fashion, I

connected the

AVR 325 to

seven Paradigm

Reference

Studio/20

speakers, as

well as to two

subwoofers:

Paradigm’s 

12-inch PW-2200 and

Pinnacle’s 8-inch Baby

Boomer. If you’re

keeping score, that

adds up to 7.2 chan-

nels, and I pulled a

few Dolby EX and

DTS ES titles off of

the shelf to take full advantage of

them. Unfortunately, I couldn’t

supplement my own discs with

anything current from Blockbuster.

Whether the EX and ES formats

aren’t penetrating quickly, EX- and

ES-encoded titles aren’t properly

labeled, or luck just ran against

me that day, I don’t know.

Setting up the AVR 325 in a

rough-and-ready way doesn’t take

long, thanks to Harman/Kardon’s

patented and trademarked EzSet

system (the legal department must

have put in almost as many hours

as the research-and-development

department did). At the tip of the

remote, there’s a small micro-

phone that senses the customary

pink-noise test tones and sends

level-setting commands back to

the receiver, which means that

you can get along without an

SPL meter, although it wouldn’t

hurt to use a meter to double-

check and fine-tune. You might

find, as I did, that EzSet and

your meter come up with slightly

different settings.

As I set up the receiver, I

tripped over one of Harman/

Kardon’s user conveniences.

Every time I tried to assign the

digital coax-2 jack to the video-2

input, the receiver switched to

the analog audio inputs. At first,

I thought the menu was failing

to accept the setting, but it turns

out that the video-2 input has a

unique logic circuit that switches

to coax-2 when a digital signal is

present and defaults to the ana-

log jacks when there’s no digital

signal. This will come in handy

with certain HDTV cable boxes

that output digital audio for

some channels and analog audio

for others. (Until recently, I had

such a box, but I’ve upgraded to

one that feeds both digital and

analog soundtracks through 

the coax outputs.)

I only had one gripe with the

AVR 325, and that concerned its

remote. It has both learning

capability and preprogrammed

codes, but, with all of those tiny

buttons, using it to operate an

entire system would be a mixed

blessing. The OSD button that

activates the onscreen menu is

especially hard to find. On the

positive side, Harman/Kardon

priced models’ spec sheets, and

you’d be surprised to find how often

the phrase “all channels driven” is

mysteriously absent. While you’re

at it, look for the full frequency

response of 20 hertz to 20 kilohertz,

as Harman/Kardon specifies.

Occasionally, you might find a few

competitors slip by with a less-

demanding 40 Hz at the low end.

If I could condense everything

I know about receivers down to

four words of advice, they would

be these: Buy by the pound. A

heavier black box is more likely

to house a beefier power supply,

and that suggests greater dynamic

prowess, among other benefits.

The AVR 325 weighs in at a healthy

40 pounds; that’s about 13 pounds

heavier than Harman/Kardon’s

next model down, the 5.1-channel

AVR 225 ($549), and only 4 pounds

lighter than the next model up, the

7.1-channel AVR 525 ($1,199).

While we’re talking about num-

bers, let me repeat my conviction

A.

The AVR 325 is 

a surround lover’s

receiver, offering

Dolby EX, DTS ES,

Dolby Pro Logic II,

and LOGIC7.

B.

The back panel

sports two compo-

nent video inputs,

an eight-channel

analog audio input,

an RS-232 port, and

assignable rear-

channel amps.

A

B

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