Audiophile system with Yamaha core and wired main and wireless remotes


What would be your recommendation for an audiophile system with a Yamaha receiver or integrated Yamaha amp being the center piece (defining the sound), feeding a pair of wired towers and sub (mains) and two pairs of wireless remote speakers (simultaneously) in a large open loft space, sourcing TT, CD, Tape, tuner and streaming services. 

I’m currently gobbling together a solution involving an R-2000, an RCA switch, a phono pre, a Wiim Pro+ and two Wiim Minis, two towers and a sub for the mains and four smaller powered speakers for the remotes/rears. 

But I’m suspicious that there is a better, more simple, more user friendly way to achieve this, without sacrificing the signature higher-end Yamaha sound quality. Less footprint, less gadgets, less wires would be a plus. 

How would you go about this. I’m interested to hear your thoughts for both approaches: building it from scratch or with some of the devices I already own (as in above). 

Thank you!

raphaz

The R-N2000A is a stereo receiver (stereo integrated amp with built-in dac/streaming capability) for 2 channel audio. It is for stereo use and won't accommodate any additional wireless speakers.

The Aventage line of Yamaha receivers, RX-A4A, RX-A6A, etc are multichannel receivers. Such receivers will accommodate 5 or 7 or 9 or 11 speakers depending on the model and will pair with some wireless speakers from their musiccast eco system. The latter type of speaker can be set up as a wireless surround or rear speaker. These receivers have built-in streaming features and don't need your Wiim.

Get something that better fits your use case.

I certainly considered Musicast.

Unfortunately the selection of speakers compatible with Musicast WiFi seem still limited to Yamaha products. As much as I trust Yamaha gear, speakers don’t seem their strength, and my impression of Musicast compatible Yamaha speakers is that they seem mostly plastic and their specs/measurements not impressive.
But to be fair, I haven’t experienced any of them, so I could be wrong.

Maybe I can be convinced otherwise by someone who actually uses them?