
Features: 8
Performance: 10
Value: 8
Overall: 8.7
A reference-quality preamp-processor with a reasonable price tag, the DHC-80.3 stands at the top of a class of one.
+ THX Ultra2 Plus certified
+ 8 HDMI v1.4 inputs (1 front panel), 2 outputs
+Transcodes component, composite, and S-video to HDMI
+ Upconverts lower-rez analog or digital video up to 1080p or 3840 x 2160 “4K” formats via HDMI, and 1080i via component video
+ Decodes Dolby TrueHD, DTS-HD Master Audio, and DSD (SACD)
+ Dolby PLIIz, DTS Neo:X surround, and 9 proprietary modes
+ Audyssey MultEQ XT32 auto-setup/calibration, EQ system
+ Streaming audio via wired Ethernet. Options include local content via DLNA and vTuner and Spotify Net radio
+ Onscreen menus for setup, streaming-media use
+ FM/AM/Sirius-ready tuner with 40 presets
+ Zone 2 (stereo audio + composite video) and Zone 3 (stereo audio only)
+ Direct iPod/Phone/Pad connection via front-panel USB port
+ Free iPod/Phone/Pad app delivers key remote control functions
+ 8-component pre-programmed/learning remote
+ IR in/out (2/1), 12-v trigger (3), RS-232 serial port; IP-controllable via Ethernet
17.1 x 7.75 x 17.5 in; 29.8 lb
$2,600, integrahometheater.com
How long have Integra’s A/V preamplifier/processors been around? Long enough to become a bit of an institution among home theater insiders. If you were assembling a serious system and demanded legitimately audio/videophile performance in every aspect but were unable or unwilling to pay the sometimes absurd prices asked for “seriously high-end” gear, an Integra pre/pro is what you bought.
That situation is unlikely to change with the DHC-80.3, the latest flagship preamp/processor from Integra (sister brand of Onkyo). The Integra DHC-80.3 raises the performance bar with a few choice new tech nuggets, and it holds the value bar fairly fast with a substantial but un-ridiculous price that’s some $400 less than the company’s equivalent A/V receiver model, the DTR-80.3. (Absent the onboard power, the two are virtually identical.)
The lead story for the 80.3 is video processing. The new Integra is the first mainstream A/V component to incorporate “4K” video processing. Or, at least, 4K-ish: The Integra can upscale high- and standard-def video to the 3,840 x 2,160-pixels QFHD (Quad Full HD) format. This simple quadrupling of 1080p video is one of the formats (along with 4,096 x 2,160-rez Digital Cinema 4K) that come under the general “4K” heading.
There’s no shortage of online chatter about whether QFHD is the real deal or simply “faux-K,” as some wags would have it. In the meantime, neither I nor you (probably) can display any 4K flavor at home (though this is now changing, with a very few high-dollar projectors arriving from Sony, JVC, and others), so it is currently a moot question for us mortals. But Integra’s inclusion of 4K video scaling in the DHC-80.3 was a forward-thinking move.
The new Integra proved no more daunting to set up than any high-line A/V receiver, though the process was a bit lengthy due to its many options. One such is its inclusion of Audyssey MultEQ XT32, the flagship version of the firm’s built-in auto-calibration/room-correction processing, which uses data acquisition from as many as 8 calibration-mike positions to deliver greater digital-EQ precision.
Before diving in, I first linked up HDMI and other necessary cables, including a tangle of seven audio interconnects to my power amps: a 5 x 200-watt unit supplemented by my ancient (but still hale) 2 x 100-watt Apt One for the front-height channels. For the front LCR channel trio, I chose to use the Integra’s balanced-line (XLR) outputs — which are supplied for all 9.2 channels — mostly because this is virtually the only distinction between the DHC-80.3 and the DTR-80.3 A/V receiver, which lacks balanced outs. (I don’t feel strongly about balanced connections for short-run, line-level hookups since the balanced line’s principal virtue is rejection of induced hum and noise over long-length, very low level microphone cable runs. But hey, it was there, so I used it.)
My “long version” Audyssey setup took a full 30 minutes to complete, but the results were hard to dispute. MultEQ XT32 set the Integra DHC-80.3 pre/pro for a 40-Hz main-channels crossover, and 50 Hz for center and surrounds, all of which reflect honest assessments of my speakers’ abilities. It’s the first cal-bot I’ve found to be quite so accurate. The Room EQ results were recognizable from many a previous Audyssey setup in my room: incrementally “clearer” and “quicker” midrange, smoother treble, and tighter, more articulate bass. It works, and, I have to say, it works well.










Copyright © 2013 Bonnier Corp. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.


Great review! I have one on order and will hopefully be picking it up tomorrow. I have a couple questions though.
Exactly what is missing that keep this unit from scoring a 10 in the features department? Also, since from what I know and what you pretty much say in the review there is no other preamp (except Onkyo of course) with comparable features and performance for anywhere near this price point, why just an 8 in the value department?