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#41 |
Blu-ray Count
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Oppo still services their players to this day. They respond to emails within hours on a business day. Repairs, if needed, cost a flat $109 for all makes and models. Contrast that with any other manufacturer's customer service.
What I would like to get is another 4K disc player with a solid build quality, not a featherweight plastic box, that can do a great job playing all disc formats. I only have so many inputs on my AVR. The ability to play an SACD is less important, but it would be nice to have. It would also be great if it supported a wide range of video file types. |
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#42 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#43 |
Blu-ray Count
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#44 | |
Special Member
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Portishead ♫
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Stay on topic too. |
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#46 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I did though try the Montage, first watching with the deinterlacer set to Auto and then to Video. With it on Auto then not only did it have the extra jaggies but it also showed combing on several of the edit points. With it on Video then the combing was eliminated, but now it's causing shimmering and moiré on finer details because it's applying a Video deinterlacer to Film content. The Euro 820 is just so very, very bad at playing 480i any way you slice it. I say that because, as I mentioned previous, PAL/576i content doesn't seem to be affected anywhere near as badly. Using the R2 DVD of My Fair Lady, at first I was horrified because it was unbelievably jaggy, but then I realised I'd left the deinterlacer on Video and switching it back to Auto made it look 10x betterer, because it was applying the correct deinterlacing and not forcing video cadence onto film. I then compared the same DVD playing on the OPPO 203 and aside from some additional but very mild jaggies on diagonals on the Panny the two were very similar indeed, with the Panny looking superficially 'sharper' because of the extra special sauce they're ladling on. So for PAL DVD content the Panny 820 is fine, more than watchable on a day to day basis. But for NTSC? Shoot it man! Shoot it in the head! One thing I will say is that film-based NTSC content doesn't look as mega-jaggy as that video-based torture test NTSC content does. I mean, it's still way worse than the OPPO when you compare them (those piano strings in the Montage, yikes!) but I can understand why people might not think it terrible in isolation just because DVD itself is thought of as terrible, that things like jaggies are par for the course. They're unavoidable when dealing with such low-rez content, true, but there comes a point when I have to aks if it's the content doing it or the player doing it, and as always I don't want any extra processing slathered on if I can help it, even when playing DVD. And I wonder if the extra sharpening applied by default in the Panny is also what's making people think it's "better" for DVD than whatever other playback deck they have to hand. |
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#47 |
Special Member
Jul 2020
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I finally have an answer as to why I've never been bothered by the supposedly horrendous DVD playback on the 820. I don't play many, but when I have they've always been PAL. They all seemed to look about as good as you'd expect for a DVD.
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#48 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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But my DVDs are predominantly NTSC which is why it niggles me so much. And it's not just this current generation of Panny players that are doing it, I noticed it going right back to the OG UB900 4K player. |
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#49 | |
Member
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The only reason I bought a separated 4k player is because I always wanted a region free/multi-region one, I have a lot of old blurays and DVDs from other regions and it was always a pain to not be able to play them My bet is that they will keep selling these current models for a long time still. Last edited by Vixzer; 05-06-2022 at 04:47 PM. |
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#50 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Yeah, the UHD tech was essentially born fully formed and apart from adding features like Dobly and the Pannysonic Optimiser there's no need to keep updating it. And it's not like everyone else - well, the few companies who remain in the market - have been clamouring to add their own Optimiser-type function, mainly because the likes of Sony and LG are in the TV market too and they'd rather improve the tone mapping inside their TVs instead.
BD maturing as a format didn't stop the companies from releasing new models every year, true, but that was when this market was actually worth something and worth competing for with virtually all the big home theatre companies involved. Shitty DVD players that can be knocked out for pennies in China are a no brainer, but a new(ish) format means new licensing fees, new costs and with disc dying on its arse as mass-market media we're lucky that they're keeping UHD players going at all. |
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#51 | |
Banned
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#52 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Unless you're watching a garbage transfer/encode then there should be nothing wrong with watching DVDs on a large screen. Just leave the image be and don't add any post-processing and you'll get pleasing results.
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#54 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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The only DVD I would consider watching is the old TV special version of The Wave, which I watched in school and recently learned is on DVD. Can't think of anything else. |
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Thanks given by: | yoshinobu (05-10-2022) |
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#55 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I've had about a couple dozen DVDs in my rotation and I've even watched them on a 100"+ screen (sometimes rough but really not that bad) using a Pioneer Elite LX-500 4k player. That number is dwindling down as the movies are being released on blu-ray and jumping straight to 4k uhd disc. I don't see myself completely going DVD free....or even vhs free since I have a few that never received an upgrade to any other format.
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Thanks given by: | chip75 (05-09-2022) |
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#56 | |
Special Member
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#58 |
Junior Member
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For some reason Panasonic's North American lineup is different to their European lineup; in North America the DP-UB420 is sold as a cut down version of the DP-UB820 with no Dolby Vision support, while in Europe the DP-UB450 is sold as an upgraded version of the DP-UB150 with Dolby Vision and extra digital audio outputs. Bizarre.
Unless cost optimisations happen with regards to the internal components of players that can persuade manufacturers to redesign their product ranges, I don't think we'll see any more new players 'designed from a clean piece of paper' any time soon. |
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#59 |
Active Member
Jan 2016
Midwest USA
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What more do 4K/UHD players need?
Is everything in the 4K/UHD standard(s) implemented in the newest (software) upgrades on the currently available players? (my Magnavox MBP6700P works well enough for me to check out my 4K/UHD discs for playability, but lacks Dolby Vision processing) Kirk Bayne |
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#60 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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