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  1. #1
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    Yamaha RX-V3800 Ventilation.

    Hi I have a question about the RX-V3800 and it's temperature/ventilation.

    I've recently upgraded from a Yamaha RX-V2300 to the 3800 and the unit runs considerably hotter than the 2300 did. The manual states that it requires 30 cm on top and 20cm on each side of the unit for ventilation.

    The old 2300 manual says the same thing but i ran the 2300 for 6 years in a space with about 7 inches of open space above it and about an inch or so on each side. It's in a cabinet and while this isn't an enclosed space it's not near the 20cm on each side like the manual states.

    My question is whether or not it's safe to place the 3800 in the same space even though it runs a little hotter? There's plenty of air circulation on the top of the unit but the sides dont have 20cm since its in a wall unit. Will this be ok? Thanks in advance for any help!

  2. #2
    Class of the clown GMichael's Avatar
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    How hot is hot? Can you hold your hand on it for a few seconds? Or can you fry an egg with it?
    WARNING! - The Surgeon General has determined that, time spent listening to music is not deducted from one's lifespan.

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    Quote Originally Posted by GMichael
    How hot is hot? Can you hold your hand on it for a few seconds? Or can you fry an egg with it?
    I can firmly place my hand on it and leave it there. It's not hot enough to cause pain where i can't touch it. But it does feel as though it runs a little hotter than my previous receiver (the rxv2300)

    I can drop the shelf even lower to give it around 8 or 9 inches of ventilation on top. the front of the shelf it totally open, no glass doors or anything. But the manual suggests 8 inches on each side?!? There's no way I can do that with my current furniture. I've never seen a setup that allowed that much room...

    Up until now I thought I was being OVER generous with the ventilation i gave it (approx 7" on top) but then i see the manual suggests a FOOT on top and 8 inches on each side... and now I'm worried because I can't give it that much space on each side.

    opinions?

  4. #4
    Class of the clown GMichael's Avatar
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    It should be fine. It wouldn't hurt to give it extra room if you can. But I doubt that it really needs it.
    WARNING! - The Surgeon General has determined that, time spent listening to music is not deducted from one's lifespan.

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    Quote Originally Posted by GMichael
    It should be fine. It wouldn't hurt to give it extra room if you can. But I doubt that it really needs it.
    The sides of the wall unit ar fixed so i cant make the shelf "wider" but i can give it a little more room on top if needed. I just never knew so much space was needed on the SIDE before... i always thought the top of the unit was what mattered in terms of ventilation.

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    thxpaul,

    I have a very similar setup as you, with my 3800 inside an audio cabinet with only about 1" - 2" on the sides. It's more important to have ventilation above, as air is entering from the sides and exhausting out the top. There's about 7" - 8" above mine and everything is fine. You shouldn't have any problems. on your purchase too!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rich-n-Texas
    thxpaul,

    I have a very similar setup as you, with my 3800 inside an audio cabinet with only about 1" - 2" on the sides. It's more important to have ventilation above, as air is entering from the sides and exhausting out the top. There's about 7" - 8" above mine and everything is fine. You shouldn't have any problems. on your purchase too!
    Thanks for the replies guys! More are welcome!

    texas, do you find the temperature levels of the 3800 to be about average for a receiver of such output?

    As I stated I'm just worried now since i discovered what's printed in the 3800 manual - but then i went back to the 2300's manual and discovered the exact same 20-20-30cm ventilation sugggestions for that model as well... so perhaps Yamaha is just erring on the side of caution and using the same guidelines for every receiver manual.

  8. #8
    Class of the clown GMichael's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by thxpaul
    Thanks for the replies guys! More are welcome!

    texas, do you find the temperature levels of the 3800 to be about average for a receiver of such output?

    As I stated I'm just worried now since i discovered what's printed in the 3800 manual - but then i went back to the 2300's manual and discovered the exact same 20-20-30cm ventilation sugggestions for that model as well... so perhaps Yamaha is just erring on the side of caution and using the same guidelines for every receiver manual.
    It's typical for manufactures to be very cautious with what they tell you. Especially in writing. They are just covering their butts.
    WARNING! - The Surgeon General has determined that, time spent listening to music is not deducted from one's lifespan.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by thxpaul
    Thanks for the replies guys! More are welcome!
    No problem!

    Quote Originally Posted by thxpaul
    texas, do you find the temperature levels of the 3800 to be about average for a receiver of such output?
    Yes. You should put your hand on top of an Onkyo of similar ilk. You WON'T be able to leave your hand on it.

    Mind you, mine runs slightly cooler because I'm not driving my power hungry speakers with it, but only slightly. I like my rock-n-roll LOUD, and even before I added an amp to the picture, it still ran cooler than an Onkyo in operation.

    Quote Originally Posted by thxpaul
    As I stated I'm just worried now since i discovered what's printed in the 3800 manual - but then i went back to the 2300's manual and discovered the exact same 20-20-30cm ventilation sugggestions for that model as well... so perhaps Yamaha is just erring on the side of caution and using the same guidelines for every receiver manual.
    No worries dude. GM is right. It's like torque management for a car. The manufacturer wants to get the automatic transmission through the warranty period, so he retards timing during the shift.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rich-n-Texas
    No problem!


    Yes. You should put your hand on top of an Onkyo of similar ilk. You WON'T be able to leave your hand on it.

    Mind you, mine runs slightly cooler because I'm not driving my power hungry speakers with it, but only slightly. I like my rock-n-roll LOUD, and even before I added an amp to the picture, it still ran cooler than an Onkyo in operation.


    No worries dude. GM is right. It's like torque management for a car. The manufacturer wants to get the automatic transmission through the warranty period, so he retards timing during the shift.
    Yeah I used to own a Technics receiver about 10 years ago that would get so hot it was scary. It literally felt like food would cook on it.

    How hot did your 3800 get while it was driving speakers? The speakers I'm driving are a set of mission 700 series which are relatively easy for the 3800 to power I assume since they're not terribly demanding.

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    I think I remember posting the temp measurement I took when I first got the receiver and had the B&W's connected directly. IIRC it was 90 degrees air temp above the grill with the cabinet door closed.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rich-n-Texas
    I think I remember posting the temp measurement I took when I first got the receiver and had the B&W's connected directly. IIRC it was 90 degrees air temp above the grill with the cabinet door closed.
    Yeah I guess I'd need a thermometer to get a reading on mine. I've just been reading about how heat will shrink the life of a receiver and it makes me a little paranoid.

    Tonight I'm going to drop the shelf another notch or two I think. But the 1.5" clearance on each side of the unit will have to do i guess

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    Not to worry. Just enjoy the music.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rich-n-Texas
    Not to worry. Just enjoy the music.
    Cheers mate!

    Since you're a 3800 owner as well I want to ask you a question. My previous 2300 sounded almost as though without any setup whatsoever, it had a little more bass right out of the box. The 3800 sounds a little less bassy to me and if i want to achieve the same level I almost need to adjust the bass tone another dB or so.

    Aside from being a different unit, why might this be?

  15. #15
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    Well, this one I can't help ya with. From day one I've had issues with lower frequencies and my listening area. Room modes they call them. I can walk behind the couch and get good low end, but if I walk inside the area about 10' away from my mains, bass almost completely disappears. Things improved greatly when I added the amp, but the phenomenon still exists.

    Do you have or are you adding a subwoofer to your setup?

  16. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rich-n-Texas
    Well, this one I can't help ya with. From day one I've had issues with lower frequencies and my listening area. Room modes they call them. I can walk behind the couch and get good low end, but if I walk inside the area about 10' away from my mains, bass almost completely disappears. Things improved greatly when I added the amp, but the phenomenon still exists.

    Do you have or are you adding a subwoofer to your setup?
    I DID have a mission 70ASA sub up until last october but the amp inside it blew so I've yet to replace it. Up until now bass levels with my fronts were good without the sub powered by the 2300 - but the 3800 sounds as though bass levels are set lower by default or something, nothing an adjustment can't fix - but on my 2300 I didn't play with the treble/bass knobs at all and the bass was stronger.

  17. #17
    Class of the clown GMichael's Avatar
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    Have you run the auto set-up yet? Out of the box, there's no telling what settings you have.
    WARNING! - The Surgeon General has determined that, time spent listening to music is not deducted from one's lifespan.

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    There are certainly pluses and minuses to having so much flexibility in a receiver, but I'll take it any day. It's a complicated machine so keep the manual handy. Frankly, I'd put the 2300 out of my mind. The 3800 is the here and now IMO.

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    Quote Originally Posted by GMichael
    Have you run the auto set-up yet? Out of the box, there's no telling what settings you have.
    Hey if you're talking about the YPAO setup with the microphone, then yes i ran it but it unbalanced all my speakers and I didn't really like that. Like the left surround was +2 while the right was .5... why the need for different levels?

    Is there any other type of auto setup i should do?

  20. #20
    Class of the clown GMichael's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by thxpaul
    Hey if you're talking about the YPAO setup with the microphone, then yes i ran it but it unbalanced all my speakers and I didn't really like that. Like the left surround was +2 while the right was .5... why the need for different levels?

    Is there any other type of auto setup i should do?
    That's the one. I expect that the distances from each speaker to where you had the mic (where you sit) were not all the same. That's why it sets different levels. This is so that they all sound the same where you are sitting.
    I don't like how it sets the EQ's either. I set each of them to flat when I'm done. Also, the set up doesn't do that great of a job with the sub levels. I always end up turning that up after it's done.
    WARNING! - The Surgeon General has determined that, time spent listening to music is not deducted from one's lifespan.

  21. #21
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    Okay so, I dropped the unit another 2 inches in the shelf just for safe measure. I took a logical look at it and there's no way the thing's not getting enough ventilation now....

    I attached a pic just to provide a better idea of the room I've given this thing.

    Ran it for a couple of hours solid and i think the reason (or part of the reason) it feels hotter than my 2300 is because the arc heat sink is pretty close to the top grille.... where as on the 2300 the heat sink/amplifier was deeper in the unit...

    that's an educated guess based on what I can see through the top vents.

    upward and onward

    OH one more thing, I've noticed that when listening to the CD player, attached with standard RCA analogue cables - the amp runs a little warmer than when listening to a BluRay soundtrack through the fibre optic connection... why's that?

    Last edited by thxpaul; 08-06-2008 at 06:21 AM.

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    "OH one more thing, I've noticed that when listening to the CD player, attached with standard RCA analogue cables - the amp runs a little warmer than when listening to a BluRay soundtrack through the fibre optic connection... why's that?"

    Anybody?

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    Can I make a suggestion?

    Don't worry about it!

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    Quote Originally Posted by Rich-n-Texas
    Can I make a suggestion?

    Don't worry about it!
    I'm not exactly worried I'm just curious why a 2ch. output would warm the amp up more than a 5ch output. Seems as though it should be the reverse no?

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    Did the ambient (room) temperature change during your checks?

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