Modern AV Receiver vs Amp / Pre-Amp separates? Genuine question


Do modern AV receivers (mid-range price on up) with the latest DACs deliver the bulk of the musical experience that a separate AMP+DAC or AMP+Pre-Amp+DAC can deliver for about the same price?  What if one purchased a twice as expensive Amp+Pre+DAC combo, would you necessarily get 2X the musical quality and experience?  I ask this because I think there are quite a number of folks who believe for the most part, clean, powerful amps pretty much should deliver the same sound, with no significant differences.  Some believe that a pre-amp could improve sound, but perhaps it's due to better impedenace matching at play.  In other words, maybe the dedicated power supply, higher quality inner components, and cleaner circuit and cabling bring some benefit but not necessarily musical experience improvement in direct proportion to the price increase.  And a well designed, modern receiver with modern dac and direct-mode for 2-channel audio can be nearly as good for less money and greater simplicity.  Also, the room settings of modern receivers may also be a distinct advantage of a modern receiver over separates.

Do most of you agree that it's easier to tell the differences between speakers, DAC and sources than it is to tell the difference between amplification sources like recievers vs pre-amp/amp/dac/source combos?  Would there be greater diminishing returns for the money when looking specifically only at receivers vs pre-amp/amp/dac/source combos?

It seems some blind tests conducted found that listeners were hard pressed to tell the difference between amplifiers, or between receivers vs separates.


What are your own experiences?









128x128ethanhallbeyer
@ethanhallbeyer

No, most every system sounds better with a pre-amp, unless using like a Benchmark DAC hi h can output >20Vrms with balanced connections.  
  
Also, if using a subwoofer(s), the room correction (Audyssey for Denon/Marantz) is highly beneficial (some audiophiles debate whether to bypass DSP for the L/R or not, but almost everyone agrees it helps with bass).
AV preamp processors receive regular software update supports as AVRs do. 
I've always been using AV pre pro in my dedicated HT room and I received software update support regularly. 
I don't know where you got the info from and what made you think that AV pre pro do not receive software update supports.
@caphill

Name a process that’s <$4000 that has Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and HLG (throw in AirPlay 2 for good measure).
@ethanhallbeyer Someone else can probably explain this better than I can, but the fact that there are so few electronics and that they are of better quality and more isolated in a unit like the LS100 is exactly what allows it to sound better. 

There's so much stuff crammed into the typical AVP/AVR that you have issues with lower quality parts, interference, signals passing through printed circuit boards, etc.  There are many compromises made in the goal of providing a huge range of features. 

It's easy for me to switch back and forth between the Modwright and my Marantz AV8801 (a $4000 AVP when new) and hear the differences in sound quality.  They are not subtle.
It's just that when I look at the inside of something like an LS100, which looks very clean, with minimal components inside, it just makes me wonder which parts inside of it make it cost $4000.  I