A 10 channel AVR where you can control each pair of stereo-speakers independently seems very rare, I haven't seen one, and I would guess the ones that exist are very expensive too?
I assumed that you would be able to handle that via Media Center, treating pairs of channels as zones.
Another alternative would be a multichannel DAC, but I suspect anything over 2 channels is going to be classed as studio gear and be prohibitively expensive.
Sonos is quite expensive, and also less flexible i feel.
I agree - but if you are wanting sound to be synced across multiple rooms, it's one of the solutions that (supposedly) actually works.
I guess a single piece of hardware is the best, but the reason i wanted to try 5 USB 2-channel cards are two-fold:
1. The cost, a reasonable quality muse dac costs around 30 dollars. That is 150 dollars for all channels, I can go up to 300 or 500 dollars, but i would rather not go over that.
2. PCI-sound cards with that many channels seem to have a history of spotty drivers and unreliable support for new windows-versions, I would prefer an USB-type soundcard for compatibility.
That's completely understandable. The thing is, it's easy to send a single source to multiple rooms, or have multiple sources work independently, the problem is when you want multiple devices to sync together and they're not running off the same master clock.
That being said, I do wonder how big an issue sync would actually be in the real-world, if each is going to be in a different room.
Trying to run three stereo DACs to create a 5.1 setup is a nightmare unless you can run them off the same clock (as you can with the Mytek DACs) but if the devices are all separate two channel setups in other rooms, I wonder if it's actually going to matter - I have to assume that you're probably going to get some degree of "echo" due to the distances and other factors involved anyway.