ผมสนใจตัวอยู่นะเนี่ย ไปฟังบ้านพี่ Champ 143 แล้วผมก็เลยอยากได้บ้างนะครับ ให้ เสียงระดับ HI- END งานดีมากขอบอก ปลายเสียงสะอาดและให้รายละเอียด ขั้นเทพเลย ผมชอบสี ขาวดูสะอาดดีครับ 
ราคา 240,000-



พอดีผมมี Amp Arcam 7 Ch อยู่ด้วยวางด้วยกันมันเข้ากันจริงๆ

Arcam AV888 preamplifier-processor
Made in England. That alone is enough to distinguish this preamplifier-processor from all others I have used. But the real motivation for my interest derives from Arcam's long line of distinguished products over the years. I first got to know them in 1998, when company founder John Dawson introduced me to Arcam's integrated-circuit adaptation of dCS's formidable Ring-DAC D/A converter, which was to be used in the company's CD players. I was impressed that this relatively small company could pull off such a sophisticated innovation. Ten years later, at the 2009 Consumer Electronics Show, I got an early-morning call from Dawson, who asked me to stop by to see the prototype of the new AVR600 A/V receiver, which, wink wink, would be very similar to the AV888 pre-pro, coming soon. The demo was a typical show-and-tell in a typically small CES room, and I left with a preliminary spec sheet that raised more questions than it answered.
When, early this summer, the AV888 ($6900) arrived, its front panel was indistinguishable from that of the AVR600. The appearance of both models is astringently clean, with a nice-sized fluorescent display above a row of 12 identical buttons. Across the bottom is a vent, above which an Aux input jack and a headphone jack are flanked by the obligatory array of logos of the various licensed technologies included. At the upper right is a three-color LED; at the lower right, the Power button. Otherwise, the vast faceplate is smooth and bare. This is aesthetically pleasing but a waste of space; the spacing and uniformity of the buttons, along with their tiny labels, forced me to rely at all times on the remote control. Two of the buttons are volume up/down, and two others are input select up/down. I defy you to tell which is which from more than a foot away, even in a fully lighted room.
Things are much more pleasing around back. Here are all the inputs and outputs anyone could wish for, logically and usefully arranged. Across the bottom are five HDMI inputs and two HDMI outputs. The rest of the layout, with groups of connectors in a series of vertical columns, seems to imply modular internal construction. From left to right, these eight columns comprise:
1) IEC power inlet and voltage selector
2) 5 component video inputs, 1 component video output, Zone 3 R/L audio output
3) 5 composite/S-video inputs, 3 composite/S-video outputs, Zone 2 video/audio outputs
4) 4 optical, 3 coax digital audio inputs; optical and coax digital outputs
5) 7 R/L analog audio inputs, 3 R/L analog audio outputs
6) R/L phono input, 7.1 RCA analog inputs, 7.1 RCA analog outputs with 3 subwoofer jacks
7) Sub-D connectors for iPod and RS-232, IR, and trigger jacks; Ethernet and USB jacks

7.1 fully balanced XLR analog outputs with 3 subwoofer jacks
Clearly, with its many connections, its ability to handle high-resolution audio formats including Dolby TruHD and dtsHD MA, its video processor with 1080p output in addition to the balanced
output from the Analog Devices ADSP-21366 and ADSP-21367 DSP chips and Wolfson's high-end, 24-bit/192kHz, 8471 audio DAC chips, the AV888 is one potent machine whose myriad capabilities very few, not including me, will ever use all of.
Here's what I did use. To connect the AV888 to my system, I used the HDMI, coax digital audio, and multichannel analog inputs, and both the RCA and the XLR outputs. I also connected a flash drive with music files to the USB port and linked the AV888 to my PC and the Internet via the RJ45 Ethernet port. I accessed the setup menus, the auto setup/room EQ, and the firmware update facility. I didn't use the phono input, the headphone output, or the Zone 2 and 3, IR link, or trigger features. But I did use the universal learning remote control . . . a lot.
I connected my cable box, and my Denon DV-3800BDP and Oppo BDP-83 Blu-ray players, to the HDMI inputs, and the Oppo to the multichannel analog inputs as well. The outputs went to the Bryston 9B-STT power amplifier via RCA or XLR cables, but I could discern no difference between the two cable types over the 1m length of the connection. HDMI output went to my Fujitsu plasma dis