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TEST REPORT

P LU S

Flagship performance.

Faroudja DCDi video processing. 

Composite/S-video inputs  

upconverted to component-video. 

Bass management and synthesized  

back surround channel for  

SACDs and DVD-Audio discs.

M I N U S

Complex remote control.

Audible cooling fan.

in the lab

DOLBY DIGITAL PERFORMANCE

Output at clipping

 (1 kHz into 8/4 ohms)

1 channel driven .... 202/343 W (23.1/25.3 dBW)
5 channels driven (8 ohms) .....145 W (21.6 dBW)
7 channels driven (8 ohms) .....139 W (21.4 dBW)

Distortion at 1 watt

 (THD+N, 1 kHz)

8/4 ohms ...........................................0.03/0.04%

Noise level

 (A-wtd) ............................. –75.0 dB

Excess noise

 (with sine tone)

16-bit (EN16) ........................................... +1.4 dB

Frequency response 

20 Hz to 20 kHz +0, –0.3 dB

MULTICHANNEL PERFORMANCE, 
ANALOG INPUT

Distortion

 (THD+N, 1 kHz, 8 ohms) ....0.01/0.03%

Noise level

 (A-wtd) ............................. –83.1 dB

Frequency response

below 10 Hz to 166 kHz +0, –3 dB

BASS-MANAGEMENT 
PERFORMANCE

Subwoofer-output frequency response

 

(crossover set to 80 Hz)
12 dB/octave above –3-dB rolloff point of 74 Hz

High-pass-filter frequency response

 

(crossover set to 80 Hz)
12 dB/octave below –3-dB rolloff point of 81 Hz

Maximum unclipped subwoofer output

 

(trim at 0) ................................................ 6.5 volts

Subwoofer-output distortion 

(from 6-channel, 

30-Hz, 0-dBFS signal; trim at 0) .............. 0.05%

The AVR 7300 performed exceptionally well in 
the lab. Power output was unusually strong, 
especially with five and seven channels driven. 
Crossover response was generally consistent, 
but the 12-dB-per-octave low-pass subwoofer 
output was a little unusual — steeper, 18- or 
24-dB-per-octave slopes are more common. 
Noise performance ranged from good (multi-
channel analog) to excellent (Dolby Digital and 
CD stereo) except for 96-kHz/24-bit stereo 
(all stereo figures omitted for space — for 
complete lab data, see our Web site). The AVR 
7300 was actually a shade noisier with those 
signals than with standard CDs. Since the 

receiver performed well with 96/24 signals in 
all other respects, I suspect this was its digital-
to-analog converters misresponding to our 
dither-only test signal rather than a “real” noise 
problem. 

The receiver handled all sources and media 

types consistently except for slight changes 
(a few hertz) in the –3-dB points with analog 
inputs. Bass management was provided for 
all media, including digital stereo and multi-
channel analog (defeatable with the Direct 
mode), all channels can be set to “small,” and 
speaker-distance compensation is available for 
all main channels and all inputs. 

 — 

D.K.

trol is elegant to look at and sensibly laid 
out, but its small keys and tiny lettering 
made it difficult to use even with the back-
lighting on. (And you need two hands to 
push the Light key way down in one cor-
ner.) The pair of big, four-way keypads 
— one for volume and channel selection, 
and the other for cursor directions — look 
enough alike to be confusing, though tell-
ing them apart by touch is easy. 

On the plus side, a single key on the re-

mote (and the front panel) is dedicated to 
each major “family” of surround modes 

— like Dolby, DTS, and Logic7 — and 
you step through the variants in each fam-
ily by pressing the same button again. Un-
fortunately, the remote’s library of prepro-
grammed control codes didn’t include either 
my cable box or my DVD recorder, neither 
of which is particularly exotic.

To my surprise, once the receiver had 

been on for 30 minutes or so, its automatic 
internal cooling fan ran much of the time 
regardless of the volume setting or actual 
power demands. Though the fan was by no 
means obnoxiously loud, I could hear it 
from my listening position during pauses 
and even over very soft musical passages. 
For serious listening I usually power down 
both my TiVo and my computer for just this 
reason, so maybe I’m overly sensitive. But 
powering down the receiver to quiet its fan 
isn’t an option!

BOTTOM LINE

 Putting my relatively incon-

sequential gripes aside, the Harman Kardon 
AVR 7300 is one helluva digital surround 
receiver. If you want tremendous setup flex-
ibility, top-drawer performance, truly su-
perb surround options, and unusually cus-
tomizable video outputs, it’s one you really 
should check out.  

S&V

64

  NOVEMBER 2004 

SOUND & VISION  

soundandvisionmag.com

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