Integra's DTR-5.8 receiver does HDMI 1.3a, XM / Sirius
If you've been scouting a leading-edge AV receiver with just about every amenity out there (including HDMI 1.3a), Integra's latest offering is likely to fit the bill. The DTR-5.8 sports a standard black enclosure, twin HDMI 1.3a inputs (and one output), built-in decoding for DTS-HD Master Audio, Dolby TrueHD, and Dolby Digital Plus lossless, and a Faroudja DCDi chip for de-interlacing 480i signals. Home automaters will adore the range of control options, including a bi-directional RS-232 port, RIHD (Remote Interactive over HDMI) system, three programmable 12-volt triggers, dual IR inputs, and three unique assignable IR code sets. This two-zone, 7.1-channel unit even boasts a 90-watt-per-channel amplifier and XM / Sirius compatibility, but you're looking at a stiff $800 if these luxuries just can't be done without. Click on for a shot of the rear.



















the tank sounds good but WTF is 5.8 sound? Is that just their model number? If you are offering HDMI 1.3 you should be offering 3-4 HDMI inputs too, so close...
Integra is the premium line from Onkyo. For about the same price, you can buy the Onkyo 805 that has 3 HDMI 1.3 inputs and a host of other improvements and weighs 50 lbs. This Integra model is probably the equivalent to the Onkyo 605.
Note to A/V receiver industry: Two HDMI inputs is stupid. At a minimum, people who are going to spend $800 (and up) for an A/V amp are going to have a HD DVR and either BD or HD DVD, which fills everything up. If they want to go BD/HD neutral, we're already at 3 HDMIs.
Couple this with the stingy 2 optical audio inputs and you have a recipe for a fine 2005 model.
Ditto everyone else's comments.
I have the 605, and it's a great receiver, but WTF's up with having 3 component, 8 composite, and only 2 hdmi inputs? It's like Onkyo's marketing people must think that the majority if their customers still have turntables, cassette tapes, and VCRs?!?
It is called product differentiation. In addition to better amp, more powerful amp, better construction, they want to also reserve the 3 and 4 HDMI input features to higher end models. That way, if 3 HDMI inputs are very important to you, you might be persuaded to move up the line. For example, the Onkyo 705 (not out yet), provides 3 HDMI inputs. The 805 provides 3 too and the 875 provides 4.
8 composite inputs! Who the hell needs that?