Been looking for a cheap AV receiver that outputs HDMI and will accept S-video and a bunch of composite cables too
Any recommendations?

Check out my sale thread below, NeoGeo MVS carts & Arcade gear wanted!:Niode wrote:Send him a dodgy cheque. Make it out to Scammy McScammerson.
Yeah, they've all still got at least one input on the front or several on the rear. The POS ones you'll find on the main sales floor next to the DVD and Blu-Ray players are junk and should be avoided like the plague. I've never had a single good experience with one of those pieces of garbage.Jamisonia wrote:Have you looked at current AVRs? I was just at Best Buy yesterday looking at the newest generation, none of them had s-video. Possibly the Elite's might, but I think that's out of the poster's price range.
Check out my sale thread below, NeoGeo MVS carts & Arcade gear wanted!:Niode wrote:Send him a dodgy cheque. Make it out to Scammy McScammerson.
By definition? So by your definition neither Marantz nor Pioneer make good receivers. S-video is simply no longer a supported standard.Hatta wrote:Any good AV receiver will have S-video by definition. If you find one that does not have S-video, it is not a good AV receiver. The fact that they want over $2000 for it is irrelevant.
Mod_Man_Extreme wrote:Yeah, they've all still got at least one input on the front or several on the rear. The POS ones you'll find on the main sales floor next to the DVD and Blu-Ray players are junk and should be avoided like the plague. I've never had a single good experience with one of those pieces of garbage.Jamisonia wrote:Have you looked at current AVRs? I was just at Best Buy yesterday looking at the newest generation, none of them had s-video. Possibly the Elite's might, but I think that's out of the poster's price range.
When it comes to picking a brand new receiver go for something that can be seen as a 10-15 year investment. Pioneer, Onkyo, Marantz, McIntosh & Yamaha are all some of my favorite companies making modestly priced entry level videophile receivers and they're worth every penny.
My two main receivers are a Yamaha-Natural Sound-Cinema Series from 2005 and a Pioneer VSX-7300 from 1987. Both work excellently and are a complete pleasure to listen to. The Yamaha handles my video & audio and converts all incoming inputs to 720p via component which is something I haven't seen with any other receiver since the advent of HDMI and all the HDCP BS. The Pioneer I use for audio and everything else, my CD's, vinyl, cassettes, radio, etc... all go through it and still sounds wonderful over 20 years after my dad bought it.