Harman Kardon AVR 255 review

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TechRadar Verdict

Matches good looks with a nice price tag, this is a great receiver for the more budget-conscious

Pros

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    Great looks

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    Rich fulsome sound

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    Excellent upscaling engine

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    Unique features

Cons

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    A little warm-sounding

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    No backlight on remote

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    No iPod dock!

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The AVR 255 is Harman Kardon's most affordable 1080p-scaling, HD-audio decoding receiver to date, and easily the best-looking £600 receiver on the market.

The features list is right on the money, with Faroudja DCDi Cinema video processing, full Dolby TrueHD and DTS Master Audio compatibility and full-spec v1.3a HDMIs.

Inside its suave and sophisticated-looking case are seven channels of a claimed 50W a piece. Now this isn't going to set the world afire by current standards, but as I suspected, our Tech Labs' tests show the real figures are above this – measuring 90W per channel into 8ohms with five channels driven.

Partially responsible for this is the chunky power supply – few listeners are going to be left wanting more grunt. Perhaps a more salient omission is a lack of an iPod docking port – which is probably tantamount to making a car without a steering wheel these days...

This does apply a measure of Room EQ but there isn't any way to delve into the settings and tweak them manually. Then again, when you have got assignable rear-back channel amps for zone two, a seven-device pre-programmed remote control and such wizardry as programmable power-up volume to play with, do we care?

The whole outfit is complete with a large and only marginally stylish remote control with some keys that light-up but no overall backlight. That is seriously not helpful in a darkened room….

Rack up the volume as the shots ring out: the AVR 255 articulates each gun blast with a real percussive crack and reverb that sets out the dimensions of the room as clear
as a surveyor's tape measure.

There is no background music to detract from Neo's rising paranoia and the sharp knock at the door will make you jump. There is a little more low-level hiss than some of the competition, but unless you constantly listen at fairly serious volumes it is unlikely to be a great issue.

No review based on The Matrix would be complete without mention of the lobby shoot out – a scene that has its place in home cinema system demonstration history.

This ultra-smooth top-end will be ideal for smaller rooms, but those with more space, or perhaps large floorstanding speakers, might find the overall effect a little tame at the top. Compared to Onkyo's much more in-yer-face sounding TX-SR706 the Harman is positively mellow and it is certainly never going to fatigue in long-term listening.

Nor for that matter will the onboard scaling – because it is superb. Faroudja knows a thing or two about getting a standard PAL signal up to 1080p resolution, and its DCDi technology means that – unless you have a top-flight scaling disc-spinner or very high-end projector – the AVR 255 scaler will give the best result from a standard-def source.

With my display (a Marantz VP15 S1 projector) the picture was, at first, a little darker and softer than ideal (pretty standard for inexpensive scalers) but the onboard brightness, contrast and sharpness controls do wonders for the Harman's image abilities.

The acid test for scalers – the opening scene to Ice Age, with lots of block blue sky and white snow – passed muster with a bright, crisp image and barely any hint of colour banding.

Harman Kardon's AVR 255 sounds very much like it looks – smooth and sophisticated throughout.

It won't win awards for searing top-end projection, but the balance will really gel with a lot of today's sub/sat speaker packages.