It could decode TrueHD and DTS Master Audio, but I had my Oppo send everything decoded to LPCM because when I bitstreamed 5.1 FLAC music files to it, the processing load was too much for the 1030 and it would stutter, but it worked reliably with LPCM. Then I got a Yamaha RX-A1030 AVR that had HDMI. I used the multichannel analog output of my Oppo BDP-93 when I had an old pre-HDMI Yamaha that actually did apply its bass management to the multichannel analog input - it was a real outlier. That would be the only situation where both would be applying bass management.Įven then, neither would be reducing volume to the main speakers much above 80Hz, and the second one would send the sub 80Hz signal where the first one was sending it already, so it the cumulative effect of two 80H0z bandpass filters would probably not be very pronounced. Only a very few AVRs that were pre-HDMI applied bass management to the multichannel analog input. The final answer is that if you've set them both up the same way, it won't matter which kind of connection you're using unless you've got a really old pre-HDMI AVR and are using the multichannel analog connection. On the other hand, if you're using an HDMI connection to your AVR from the 203 for audio as well as video, then nothing you do in the 203's speaker configuration screen will have any effect - it'll be handled by the bass management you've set up in the AVR. Click to expand.If you are using the multichannel analog output of 203, then unless your AVR applies bass management to the analog multichannel input - which almost none do - you have to set that up in the 203 - whatever you've set up in the AVR will work for your HDMI or stereo inputs but will have no effect on the 203's multichannel analog signal.
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