Great Deal Yamaha MCR-E810SL DVD Mini System



Rating : 4.5/5.0
Price : $549.95
Availability : N/A

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Yamaha MCR-E810SL DVD Mini System Features

  • Nicely compact receiver/single-disc DVD player with two speakers
  • 120 watts of total power from 2-way bass-reflex speakers
  • Compatible with DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, CD-R/RW, VCD, DivX, MP3, WMA, JPEG
  • Receiver offers subwoofer out, tape/MiniDisc input/output, and auxiliary input; DVD player with component, composite, and S-Video outputs
  • AM/FM tuner with 40 presets



Yamaha MCR-E810SL DVD Mini System Overviews

This Micro Component System builds on past accomplishments with greater refined sound, plus an individualistic design that expresses the sound quality.


Yamaha MCR-E810SL DVD Mini System Specifications

The Yamaha MCR-E810 mini-system is a great choice for smaller living rooms with its compact profile and 120 watts of total power (60 watts x 2 channels). It also offers two discrete amps and speakers made of finely tuned cabinets and equipped with carefully selected units. It has a single-disc DVD/CD player that's compatible with a good assortment of formats, including DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, VCD, and CD-R/RW discs as well as MP3, WMA, JPEG, and DivX digital files. In addition to utilizing a Direct PLL IF Count Synthesizer Tuning system, this model also makes station selection easy. You can preset as many as 40 stations for instant one-touch tuning, and with each one the tuning mode (auto or manual) is also memorized. You can also operate an iPod via the MCR-E810's remote unit with the aid of the receiver's display when using the (optional) Universal Dock.

Its discrete construction precisely places each carefully selected part without dependency on IC chips. The amplifier uses all analog circuits, including the volume section. While it is compact, it includes high sound quality measures scrupulously designed in every detail: a large power supply transformer, high sound quality parts groups (including new capacitors), a high stiffness body with an octagonal section that is resistant to resonance, and large speaker terminals compatible with banana plugs.

The receiver's subwoofer out terminal outputs bass frequencies so you can connect a subwoofer. Adding a subwoofer to your system pays big dividends: not only do you get bigger and better bass sound, but the overall sound field has much greater depth and presence. It also includes a tape/MiniDisc input/output as well as an auxiliary input. The DVD player provides component, composite, and S-Video outputs, as well as digital optical and coaxial audio outputs.

The speaker cabinets are built with internal crossbracing offering a unique wedge structure.This type of cross-braced structure is used in top class speakers and Yamaha engineers are able to make the most of its advantages. It produces a tighter sound and the increased strength cuts down unwanted vibration. And they have the same luxurious and environmentally friendly finish as Yamaha's grand pianos.

Tech Talk
DivX is a compressed digital video format (like MP3) that's based on the MPEG-4 video compression standard. It can reduce the video from a DVD (MPEG-2) to around 10 percent of its original size while still retaining good video and audio quality, enabling you to store several two-hour length movies on burned DVD media.

What's in the Box
Receiver/DVD player, two speakers, speaker cable, remote control (with batteries), AM/FM antennas, printed operating instructions


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Customer Review

Best Customer Review : One reviewer compared the quality of the speakers to NS-10s (studio caliber playback monitors). They're pretty close. I'm thoroughly happy with this system. Don't kid yourself, though, in that if your room is of decent size, you really do need to add a subwoofer. Just make sure the sub you get isn't too powerful for the system. I recommend the Yamaha SW216. I figured I had Yamaha components, so I might as well get a Yamaha subwoofer as well. It's a total of 100 watts, which makes sense in compatibility because the E810SL is 65 watts per channel (130 total), and I never turn the sub up more than a 1/3rd of the way to get my added bass. It's not "boomy" but just accentuates and delivers the lows as it should. I got it online at amazon for .00 from JR Computer World or something like that.

The cost of the MCR-E810SL is higher, but worth it, even with the added expense of a sub-woofer. The E810SL basically has higher end, bigger component quality but in a compact size. No eq on the tuner, but the lack of it doesn't bother me. Easy hook-up; simple user friendly controls on the tuner. Subwoofer out on the back of the tuner; tons of features for additional hook-ups. If you're going to get a mini-DVD system, this is the way to go if you really care about sound quality relative to music. I'm very picky about sound and this is probably the only mini-system that hasn't disappointed me. Relative to music, its deadly accurate and warm sound is astonishing for a system in this price range. I never crank up the system more than a 1/3rd of the way; and keep in mind I have a good sized living room. Believe me when I say that it's just fine for DVD or tv sound as well. I would get this mini-DVD system any day over a 2.1 simulated surround sound type system.


Customer Review 1 : One Of The Best I Have Owned - jokamachi - california
I'll let other reviewers expurge the lesser details of this system. What I will say, however, is that this is one of the best stereos around... and Yamaha speakers can't be beat. Shame it's unavailable now, but Yamaha has a knack for keeping up with trends. Can't wait to see what they come up with next.



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