The instrument optically yes identical to the SR5006 has absolutely convinced me. The reduced to the minimum control options on the front and to the porthole are simply eye-catching and also differ from the "standard" views of other AVR's significantly.
This of course comes the sound. Currently, although only two speakers are connected, but what comes out, that's really great. I'm not a hi-fi enthusiast, but sonically because my opinion was right after all.
The calibration was a breeze, one must take a total of 6 positions in space with the supplied microphone, then everything else does the AVR. This is a user to obtain clear, understandable for everyone, step by step to the TV.
The important thing is that you have connected any external sources at the beginning. I had to plugged the HDMI connector of the satellite receiver, which did not fit the AVR. After only the HDMI connection existed at the TV, it could then go.
The only drawback (which, however, is on TV, not the receiver):
I have a Samsung 46ES7090. When the Anynet looping through the signal from the receiver does not work - for whatever reason ... Either you can Anynet enabled and then uses for TV's look exclusively to the AVR, or to do this briefly and then off again, because then works Anynet also. Because as I said no lies on the AVR but on TV (I was confirmed both by Samsung as Marantz), there is no penalty for the AVR.
I have built the AVR via WiFi over a Netgear adapter into a home network. Worked perfectly.
I've then also granted the UD5007 to. Visually and technically, the combination is a treat.
Deducting a star are only because in some cases several steps are required from power-off to the first "sound" when you want to hear, for example, Internet radio or a USB flash drive is connected. I did a little easier imagined.