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Network Stereo Receiver
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Network Stereo Receiver

List Price: $399.00
Our Price: $349.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
You Save: $50.00 (13%)
SKU:

7G751398010156

In Stock
Usually ships in 129-184 business days

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Description:

Onkyo's Hi-Fi revolution gathers pace with the TX-8050. This finely sculpted stereo receiver delivers two channels of audio precision to entertainment spaces where you don't need advanced video processing or multichannel audio. Analog A/V inputs on the TX-8050 are augmented by digital optical and coaxial audio inputs, a Universal Port for Onkyo peripherals, and a front-side USB input for direct digital connection of iPod /iPhone . The receiver's network capability, meanwhile, lets you stream internet radio or play audio from a PC or network audio storage device. Behind the smart aluminum façade lies a massive transformer and large capacitors that provide clean amplification power and help push performance well beyond the norm.

Features:

80 w/ch, 8 ohm, 20Hz-20kHz, 0.08% THD, FTC


Discrete Amplifier Design


Direct Digital Connection of iPod /iPhone via Front-Panel USB Port


Network Capability


Mass Storage Class USB Memory Playback Capability


Product Details:
Product Length: 12.94 inches
Product Width: 17.13 inches
Product Height: 5.88 inches
Product Weight: 19.0 pounds
Package Length: 21.7 inches
Package Width: 16.3 inches
Package Height: 10.0 inches
Package Weight: 23.4 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 40 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.5 ( 40 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.


Most Helpful Customer Reviews

34 of 35 found the following review helpful:

5Great Sounding and Functional ReceiverAug 17, 2011
By F. Espinosa
Bought this receiver and matched it up with a pair of Paradigm Atoms w/ Auralex speaker platforms. This was for a bedroom set-up and the unit and speakers sit on a 2x dresser. I was expecting an average sound and got much more.

Pros:
1. Plays FLAC via a NTFS USB Powered Hard Drive. The hard drive I use is 640 GB. It reads the Hard Drive relatively quickly (15 sec) and scrolls through the folders very quickly.
2. Adding the receiver to the network is easy - just enter your WEP - done. You can stream WMP and with the program Jamcast you can stream Spotify, MOG, etc via DLNA. Has Pandora, MyRhapsody and some other programs already installed on the receiver. Entering your username and password for those services using a dial is probably the most painstaking effort for setting it up.
3. Most important - it sounds GREAT. I was worried about having a lean sound with Atoms and Onkyo. However, it's actually quite warm. It could be that it's in a carpeted bedroom, but whatever works. The sound optimizer for playing MP3s works well overall in smoothing out the clipping MP3s have especially in those low kb bit rates from Pandora, etc. There's only so much that can be done on low bit rate streaming.

Cons:
There are several, but minor and wouldn't change my mind from recommending it. None of these issues are related to the sound, but just convenience.
1. No subwoofer cut-off capability. I don't feel my set-up needs a subwoofer, but if it's important to you.
2. No backlighting on the control.
3. Hard Drive doesn't shut off when the receiver is off. You'll have to unplug from USB when you are done.
4. The Android App really doesn't do much except change the volume and change the input. It does play songs off the Android, but with all the other options, don't really see a need for it. Would be nice to link Spotify, MOG, etc to the Onkyo via Android App.
5. On Pure Audio, would like the display to come back on when changing folders, input, stations, etc. Have to scroll through the sound options (5 total) to get back to pure audio after changing an option.

Other than that, to reiterate I was really impressed by the sound, esp ~$600 set-up. I have a dedicated listening room with a Squeezebox, DAC, SACD, room treatments, turntable, etc. Although this Onkyo + Atom combo doesn't beat out the dedicated listening room set-up, for computer audio it comes really close.

22 of 23 found the following review helpful:

5Just what I was looking for!Oct 13, 2011
By D. Matheny
I recently built a workshop in my backyard and wired it up with a network connection and stereo speakers while I was at it. The whole time I just assumed that good networked stereo receivers would be easy to come by for not much money - but it turns out I was wrong.

After a fairly extensive search, I finally came across this little bad boy. I've never owned an Onkyo product before, but I do know they have a good reputation - so I went ahead and pulled the trigger.

Just so you know, my main usage includes listening to AM & FM as well as networked radio stations and music from my local music collection that's already on my network.

After having said all that, here are the things I like about the Onkyo TX-8050:

1) The sound is excellent! I have it hooked up to a pair of Polk OWM5 speakers and they sound very good. Just what I was looking for in my workshop.

2) The Internet radio options are very good. With the vTuner, I can tune all of the radio stations I typically listen to, and they sound better than the AM or FM broadcasts. It's easy to organize network radio stations into named categories and the station names themselves can also be renamed. Overall, it's extremely easy to keep everything organized and easy to look up.

3) Configuring this receiver to play music off my network was simple. It's simply a matter of turning on media sharing on the PC where the music files are loaded and then scrolling down to that PC in the DLNA menu. I am sharing my music from a Windows 7 system. The hard drive and USB options are great - but I prefer using the network so I don't have a bunch of USB dongles hanging off the front of the receiver...

4) There are options to tune in just about any Internet music source you can think of, including: SiriusXM Internet Radio, Pandora, Rhapsody, Slacker, Mediafly, Napster, and Last.fm. Those are in addition to the vTuner option I already mentioned that lets you tune in radio stations that are also streaming over the Internet.

5) The favorites menu can be configured over the network. If you don't feel like scrolling from character to character, manually renaming everything - just load up the TX-8050 in an Internet browser and you can do all the renaming and configuring from there. This also lets you set URLs for manually streaming radio stations that haven't been added to the vTuner service. The way to do this is to get the IP address from the setup menu (such as 192.168.1.100), and then type it into your web browser like: "http://192.168.1.100".

6) Did I mention that the sound is excellent?!

Although, for the most part, everything is working great - I do have a few minor complaints:

1) The AM/FM reception is mediocre at best. This would be a bigger deal if my stations weren't available for Internet streaming.

2) The favorites menu is kind of cool - but the standard organization is so good that it just adds clutter in my case. It would be better if manually entered stations could just be integrated into the vTuner categories instead.

3) The network startup time is fairly long. Forget just hitting the switch and getting networked tunes in a few seconds. In my case, it takes close to a minute - and that's over a hard-wired network.

4) Setting this up was a piece of cake for me, but I wonder if someone without any networking skills would fair as well. In other words, this probably wouldn't make a great gift for dear old grandma who's just looking to listen to the radio...

Overall, this receiver is exactly what I was looking for. I wanted something with better sound than a SqueezeBox; yet with at least the same number of networking options - and the Onkyo TX-8050 pulled that combination off nicely.

I would highly recommend this if you're a techie person who wants great sound combined with all the networked music options you could want.

11 of 11 found the following review helpful:

5Great ReceiverSep 25, 2011
By Maestro
I needed a simple, low cost stereo with a phono input for a living room/dining room music system. After seeing what was out there, this was a no brainer. I'm running the 8050 into a pair of Wharfedale Diamond 10.1 speakers sitting on a built in wall bookshelf. It sounds great. Not too warm, not too bright in my room (wood floors, dining table, couch, tables, and chairs) with decent bass response. A nice, rich, full sound with all sources. I'm using the analog stereo out from an old Oppo 981 as my disc player for the time being. No complaints there. I will say discs sounded better via the Oppo analog out compared to the digital in of the 8050. But it works great for audio out from the DirecTV receiver.

I'm using a TRENDnet TEW-650AP as an AP client plugged into the 8050 to stream music from a Synology DS2011j NAS. I would have gotten the Onkyo USB adapter but the cabinet door wouldn't have closed with the adapter jutting out of the front. The AP shouldn't have taken so long to set up but the documentation is poorly worded (if you know what your doing trust your instincts - I had is set up correctly in 5 minutes but second guessed myself and wasted 2 hours).

I'm still working out some minor kinks on the NAS/WMP 11 end, but otherwise I've had no issues. Listening to Pandora via the 8050, and Shoutcast via the Synology, and it's been great. Yes, scrolling through the menus is a pain via the receiver's display but...for this price, I'll deal. Anyway, playlists and favorites can help with that.

Plays FLAC, wav, mp3 with no issue. Sounds surprisingly good with low bit rate sources (internet radio mostly; most of my mp3 are 320kHz).

Even the tuner is pretty good. I know over the air radio isn't the main selling point of this receiver, but as an afterthought I plugged in the included antenna I was surprised with the strength of the tuner.

All in all this is one great piece of equipment. I highly recommend this receiver. I had an old Onkyo Pro Logic receiver years ago and loved the sound (I got rid of it thinking I'd never need it; turns out I did. Ironically I bought another Onkyo)

Shipped without issue. Box was fine, etc.

Oh, updating firmware is painless. I did two updates via USB. Onkyo seem to be providing regular updates which is a good thing.

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:

5Nice receiverJan 02, 2012
By David Noller
I purchased this receiver to go replace an Onkyo TX-V940 receiver that I have paired with a couple of Cerwin-Vega VS-100 speakers (125 watts RMS @ 6 ohms), as well as a turntable and a CD player. The receiver is rated at 80 watts at 8 ohms and, according to Onkyo, it is about 100 ohms at 6 ohms. Since it is a bit less powered than my old receiver (100 watts at 8 ohms), I was a bit worried about whether or not it could handle these speakers, but I was worried for nothing as it is fine. I also purchased the Onkyo WiFi LAN adapter Onkyo UWF-1 Wireless LAN Adapter to go with the receiver and, as it turns out, I am mostly using it network connected. I have used it with Pandora, DLNA (to a Windows 7 computer on my home LAN) and I have also tried the free network radio with it, although I prefer Pandora. I read another reviewer who had a lot of complaints about the network features of this unit, but I have no such complaints, I am very happy with it (I set up the DLNA stuff on my computer and I set up Pandora on my computer, I don't really expect to do this on the receiver, so not a problem for me).

Regarding the power of the receiver relative to my speakers, for "normal" listening I am setting the volume of the receiver at about 10 (out of 80 I believe). This weekend, I got permission from my wife to test the volume at what, for me, is a much higher level to see whether or not I was getting any distortion or clipping. Given that, I tuned to my "Pink Floyd" channel on Pandora and cranked it up as loud as I thought I could get away with. This took me up to about 40 on the volume and it sounded very, very good to my untrained ear. I have the stereo in a very large living room with vaulted ceilings and, as I mentioned, reasonable listening levels for that room, including the adjacent kitchen, are achieved at 10-12 on the volume (granted, my speakers are pretty sensitive at 95 db).

My only complaint about the networking, which I think was mentioned by another reviewer, is that it has to reconnect every time I turn the receiver on and it takes a bit of time to do that (not sure, maybe 20 seconds or so). Once it is connected, it also has to connect to the specific service you are using (e.g. Pandora, or DLNA). Once it is connected, things work great (although I have seen one instance where Pandora disconnected and I had to reconnect it).

I found it easy to set up the networking, I used the "push button" approach on my router which worked just fine (connecting with WPA security on an 802.11N 2.4 ghz network). Entering the email and password for Pandora was a bit tedious, but worked fine (once I figured out how to find the @ sign for the email, which is answered in another review posted here.

One thing that surprised me was that my turntable (as it turns out) does not connect to the Phono inputs on the receiver (I did not realize this until I tried it and it sounded terrible, which caused me to have to go back and look at the manual for the turntable (where it clearly said "do not plug this into the Phono inputs on your receiver as it will sound terrible"). There was not a good alternative input that was not a bit misleading (I looked for auxiliary, was not there, ended up using DVD or something).

One other surprise for me was that the receiver did not recognize my 2nd generation iPOD Nano ("No storage" error). It did recognize my son's more recent iPOD, but not mine. I actually think this is a problem with my iPOD as my laptop has a similar issue with the device (although it does work with my desktop), so I am not faulting the receiver for this.

I have tried the FM and AM tuner and that seems fine, I am getting all the stations I expected to get.

I have also used my CD player with this unit and that was fine as well.

While I was researching the unit, I called Onkyo a few times to ask questions and I found them to be responsive and knowledgeable.

This receiver has several audio modes, one of which is aimed at optimizing digitized music - I like that setting the best, it seems to work very well.

So far, I am very happy with the receiver.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

5Excellent Product (but not perfect)Mar 12, 2012
By Zeek the Geek "ZtG"
This review was written after two weeks of ownership.
Do I like it? Yes!
Would I recommend it to a friend? Yes!

PROS:
- faultless sound quality
- solid design and construction, audio section in particular
- DLNA and Web enabled, including Apple and Android Apps (!)
- USB port for playing from an iPod, HDD, or other MSC player
- subwoofer output (see details)
- Zone 2 output (pre-amp only)
- firmware updates via USB or direct

CONS:
- subwoofer output does not mute when using headphones (!?)
- occasional DLNA lockups or web station dropout, but could be my network.
- hard to read front panel text, but still better than most other brands.

I needed a modestly priced stereo receiver for my office and found quite a few candidates on the web including models by Sony, Sherwood, and Onkyo. A few intriguing brand X products showed up also, but the user reviews were poor enough to scare me off. Even the Sony and Sherwood models had their hate mail, so I zeroed in on the Onkyo models. Funny that I should land there again because I chose an Onkyo model for our 7.1 home theater system a couple of years ago.

The Onkyo TX-8050 was twice what I was planning to pay, but the networking caught my eye. With that feature I can listen to internet radio and music from my NAS without turning on my PC. Some reviewers had problems with that feature, but reading between the lines I felt they may not have been very experienced with the technology. So I ordered it from Amazon.

The advanced features are pretty significant for a stereo receiver; here is an overview:
- Seven web audio services including Pandora, Last, Slacker, and Spotify. You enter your username and password only once into the receiver directly, or via PC browser.
- 40 available memories to store favorite web stations, set locally or via PC web browser.
- DNLA sees all LAN media servers, in my case a WIN 7 PC, Twonky and NAS media server.
- USB port plays any MSC device, including large HHD (one connection on front panel only)
- FM presets can be named (but only by extensive remote control gymnastics).

Everything works pretty much as promised. The browser setup and Favorites interface is great. It is so much better than slow character entry from the remote control. (I just wish they had included browser control over the receiver like they did with the Apple and Android apps, not tested). The setup instructions and process seemed easy and complete to me.

Other specs of interest: composite video switching, 80W/CH, headphone jack, phono input, 2 coax and 2 optical digital inputs. Various Listening Modes include a Music Optimizer to "enhance the sound quality of compressed music files". Be careful not to leave this on when listening to uncompressed files!

Is it perfect? Hardly.
- As with every single media player I have ever used, the player firmware is quirky. But at least this one is reliable enough to enjoy regularly.
- Menu structure could be improved, and you don't always get what you expected. For example, depending on the internet source, you may have to press Enter two or three times (this is not a delay issue, appears related to the particular web site).
- The NET and USB menus are as good as can be expected for on 2-line display, but expect time consuming selection when "going deep".
- I have yet to make the M3U Playlists on my media server work. The first selection plays correctly, and then seems to wander off course almost randomly.
- The subwoofer output is not processed in any way except volume; no bass management, EQ, etc. What's even worse is that it stays ON even when headphones are being used, and when neither speaker is selected. This is something they should be able to fix in the next firmware update.
- If you intend to use the Zone 2 feature, be aware that volume changes can be made on the remote only, not from the front panel volume control. Inconvenient but workable.
- only one "input" selector (NET) places it into the network mode. Three selectors should have been provided: one for DNLA, one for web services, and a third for Favorites.

Onkyo should be praised for introducing a networked media (audio) player in a stereo receiver. It has all the features you'd ever want in a stereo unit, and then some. And thankfully, the design has no major faults that will cause you to hate the product later, much less regret buying it.

See all 40 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
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