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Archive for December, 2009

Panasonic Blu-Ray HTIB SC-BT100

How do you define high end? Is it the gear that delivers the highest performance, sells for the highest price, or represents the most agile and innovative thinking? If that last criterion means anything, the Panasonic SC-BT100 is the very definition of a high-end home theater systems in a box. It includes a Blu-ray drive, makes daring use of bamboo fiber speaker diaphragms, and employs wireless technology to deliver signals to those two lonely surround speakers in the back of the room. Moving backward to the second criterion, price, the system sells for $1,000, on the moderate to high side by HTIB standards. And what about the first criterion, performance? Sorry, but you’ll have to read the review. Throw me a bone here this is how I earn my living.

Kind of Blu, Kind of Bamboo

Thanks to digital amplifier technology, this system fits all of its amplification and that oh-so-desirable Blu-ray Disc drive into a box that’s one-third the height of a typical surround receiver. And that includes the sub amp. Digital amps are generally more energy efficient because they waste less power in the form of heat. They are well established in compact systems and have just started to take over the surround receiver category.

In one of many beautiful touches, Panasonic built a flip-down iPod dock into the center of the front panel. It operates through the onscreen interface via the system remote. There’s also an integrated SD card reader, so you can photograph unwary friends and family members, then remove the card from your camera, slip it into the HTIB, and provide your victims with instant replay on your mercilessly large screen.

Panasonic chose to make the drivers in the left, right, and center speakers out of bamboo fiber. The system has a not unpleasantly warm coloration. It can play loudly before it starts to break up and remains reasonably benign even when stressed at high volumes. When Panasonic introduced the SC-BT100 at a press conference, I was immediately impressed not only with how it sounded but with how it felt. When I turned it up moderately loud, it didn’t hurt. The front and center speakers are two-way models with 2.5-inch woofers and slightly smaller tweeters, while each of the surrounds uses a single full-range driver. All have plastic enclosures, and all but the center one rest on pedestals.

Panasonic notes explicitly that the subwoofer speakers is a Kelton type (bandpass), with a passive radiator on the side and an active driver inside the box. It draws its power from the main system unit, not internally, by using a speaker cable hard-wired into the sub. There are no controls on the sub itself.

For prospective HTIB buyers who are leery of running cables to surround speakers, Panasonic provides moderate relief. The system includes an almost wireless surround feature. The system comes with a transmitter card that attaches to the SC-BT100 receiver unit’s back panel. This flings the signal to a receiver/amplifier at the back of the room, which feeds the speakers. The receiver/amplifier (which Panasonic calls a transceiver) re-quires an AC connection, operates at 2.4 gigahertz, and uses cables to reach the speakers.

At about 9 feet, the cables may be on the short side for some rooms. They also have a proprietary connector at one end. If you need more cable, you’ll have to splice it onto the other end. Even though the system is designed for small rooms, this is one of its few design flaws Panasonic should have provided longer cables. On the upside, the closer-than-usual surround-speaker placement gave me a chance to test the resilience of the speakers. I knocked one of the speakers to the floor three times to no ill effect. You can extend the system from 5.1 to 7.1 channels with the addition of another (optional) transceiver and pair of speakers.

The main amp/disc/control unit is loaded with a Blu-ray player that’s capable of 1080p up conversion over HMDI. According to Panasonic, it is similar to the DMP-BD30 and includes that player’s UniPhier video processing technology. [See the April 2008 issue for a full review of that player.—Ed.] However, the HTIB player adds onboard decoding for Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio. The player is not BD-Live compatible, so this unit can’t play back the BD-Live interactive features we’ll see on some major Blu-ray releases later this year.

Setup is easy. Panasonic provides audio speaker cables for all channels, terminated with color-coded plugs. Each channel uses a different color. Panasonic designed the plug to fit only one way, so you can’t wire anything out of phase by accidentally inverting it. You could only invert it at the speaker end, where soldered wire tips fit into wire-clip terminals.

Bullies, Gangs, and Ad Men

The system booted up in about 15 seconds and displayed my first disc’s menu in less than 45 seconds. So, I counted down a minute before show time. That’s quite acceptable to me and far better than early- generation Blu-ray players. All my movie selections were on Blu-ray Disc with high-resolution soundtracks.

Drillbit Taylor (Dolby TrueHD) presents the Owen Wilson charm machine in a goofy comedy with bullied school kids secured loan. It took me half the movie to fine-tune the volume for dialogue clarity. I’m so used to adjusting systems with harsh-sounding tweeters that these relatively benign bamboo-infused drivers threw me off. My final volume preference was notably louder than my initial one. I also spent time fiddling with the sub. I had to turn it down more than once. The system ships with the sub boost switched on and a very aggressive center volume setting. I used a front-panel button (not duplicated on the remote) to switch off the boost. Then I used the remote to knock the sub level down a couple more decibels. Oddly, the sub channel is the only one you can’t adjust in the onscreen menu. But along with the other channels, you can easily access it via a dedicated button on the remote in conjunction with the navigation keys and front-panel display.

Gangs of “New York”(Dolby TrueHD) is full of wild dynamic swings, from Daniel Day Lewis’ definitively threatening sotto voce to the “film” riot scenes. With this system, even loud effects were rarely fatiguing. A cleverly mixed gunshot presented four separate events in the space of a second: the shot and its reverb, followed by the ricochet and its reverb. Shattering glass almost sounded musical. This film also includes a variety of traditional music such as Irish, Chinese, and early-American fife-and-drum music. And the sweetening the Panasonic provided was just what the doctor ordered. War drums gallop through the movie’s action scenes and the sub delivered them powerfully.

Mad Men is the first TV-show-on-disc I’ve heard in DTS-HD Master Audio. Here, I made very few volume adjustments for dialogue, presumably because the show was produced for cable, and TV shows tend to have more idiot-proof vocal mixing. The varied music that accompanies the story of ad execs in the early 1960s came through well, especially the vocal-oriented jazz, which took on a creamy Madison Avenue suaveness. However, the sub revealed the limits of its pitch definition on string basses. A higher-end sub would have done this better. And it was still pretty loud, especially on the Lions gate logo, so I knocked it down another decibel to –3 dB.

iPod Savvy

Normally the practice of dismembering classical works to generate mood-oriented releases nauseates me. But Decca’s two-disc set of Mozart Adagios (and a similar set called Vivaldi Adagios) is an exception. The source recordings and the sense of flow are both satisfying—making these excellent albums for low-level background listening on an iPod. When I plugged in my first-generation Nano, I heard the sweetening of the Panasonic sys-tem, with its bamboo drivers, slickly mitigate the “MP3″ artifacts at 192 kilobits per second. Even at foreground levels, the overall feel was non fatiguing and listenable.

I like the beautifully designed full-color 16:9 onscreen display. It shows track, artist, and album name, along with an elapsed-time bar. There’s even a graphic that displays the remote’s navigation cluster—just in case you need to be reminded that the center button is Play, or that the Return button (comparable to the iPod’s Menu button) is on the lower right of the navigation wheel. The system also charged the iPod while the music played.

Not for Kids Only, the charming all-ages folkie CD by David Grisman and Jerry Garcia, bore the brunt of my experiments with stereo and the Dolby Pro Logic II Music mode. A lot of systems change their character completely when they switch between stereo source material in two channels and the same stuff processed into multiple channels via Dolby Pro Logic II (despite the fact that DPLII is tonally close to neutral). With this system, the soundfield opened up (of course), and the detail sharpened. But the album worked equally well in either mode; it imparted a golden warmth to the creaky vocals and the expertly wielded mandolin and acoustic guitar. I’m guessing this system will make a lot of folkies happy. Although the system uses different speaker designs in front and back, the timbre matching was quite good.

Once again, I turned to my Blu-ray copy of David Gilmour: Remember That Night–Live at the Royal Albert Hall and its Dolby TrueHD multichannel soundtrack. The Dark Side of the Moon side-one trilogy responded to the SC-BT100’s treatment with slightly rolled-off highs, a gorgeously communicative midrange that reveled in the lush Crosby/Nash vocal harmonies, and an open concert-hall feeling. I knew the system traded off some detail in the lossless soundtrack for soundfield size. Still, I liked the result.

The Panasonic SC-BT100 puts together a highly desirable feature package for $1,000, including Blu-ray playback, iPod compatibility, wireless surround-channel transmission, digital amplification, and speakers with bamboo drivers. I’ll go out on a limb and say that the new approach to HTIB speakers is the part that impresses me the most. And I’m far from unimpressed with the other stuff. This is one of the best in-a-box systems I’ve heard. It arguably makes the other disc-drive-inclusive models on my short list obsolete, since they only do standard-def DVD. So now I’ve got an HTIB short list of one. This system is it.

Features & Connections

Features

BD-Live: No

BonusView: Yes

Firmware Version: 1.1

Audio Decoding: Dolby: TrueHD, Digital 5.1, EX, Digital Plus, Pro Logic IIx; DTS: DTS-HD Master Audio, DTS, ES, Neo:6; Other: 4 EQ modes, 7.1-channel virtual surround, real center focus, whisper surround

HDMI Video Resolutions: 1080p/24, 1080p/60, 1080i, 720p, 480p, 480i

Compatible Playback Formats: BD-Video (Final Standard Profile), BD-MV, DVD-RAM, DVD Video, CD, CD-R/-RW, SD Memory Card

Number of Amp Channels: 5.1

Rated Power (watts, per channel): 250 into 6 ohms, front/center/sub; 125 into 3 ohms, surround

Specified Frequency Response: 120 Hz to 20 kHz

Dimensions (W x H x D, inches): 16.94 x 3.56 x 12.88

Weight (pounds): 9.1

Price: $1,000 for system

Connections

Inputs: Video: None Audio: Optical digital (1), stereo analog (1), Additional: iPod integrated dock (1), SD card

Outputs: Video: HDMI (1), component video (1), composite video (1) Audio: Surround mini-jack (1), back-surround mini-jack (1)

Speakers

SB-HF100

Type: Front Satellite

Tweeter (size in inches, type): 2.38, bamboo fiber cone

Woofer (size in inches, type): 2.5, bamboo fiber cone (2)

Full-range driver (size in inches, type): None

Nominal Impedance (ohms): 6

Recommended Amp Power (watts): 250 peak

Available Finishes: Black

Dimensions (W x H x D, inches): 4.78 x 12.94 x 5.09

Weight (pounds): 3.7

SB-HC100

Type: Center Satellite

Tweeter (size in inches, type): 2.38, bamboo fiber cone

Woofer (size in inches, type): 2.5, bamboo fiber cone (2)

Full-range driver (size in inches, type): None

Nominal Impedance (ohms): 6

Recommended Amp Power (watts): 250 peak

Available Finishes: Black

Dimensions (W x H x D, inches): 11.88 x 4.38 x 5.28

Weight (pounds): 3.5

SB-HS100

Type: Surround Satellite

Tweeter (size in inches, type): None

Woofer (size in inches, type): None

Full-range driver (size in inches, type): 2.5, paper cone

Nominal Impedance (ohms): 3

Recommended Amp Power (watts): 125 peak

Available Finishes: Black

Dimensions (W x H x D, inches):4.78 x 12.94 x 5.09

Weight (pounds): 2.2

Manufacturer Info

Panasonic

(800) 211-PANA

www.panasonic.com

Blu-ray Player LG BD390

LG Electronic has been manufacturing home appliances and electronics for over 50 years. In 1995,it acquired Zenith (the company that invented the remote control) and started to gain market share in North America with cell phone technology, digital set-top boxes, and Dish television. When the format war was in full swing in 2007, LG became the Switzerland of electronics house insurance companies by releasing the BH100 dual-format Blu-ray HD DVD player. It received tepid reviews due primarily to playback glitches on HD DVDs, but you have to admire the company for attempting to appeal to a wider range of consumers.

Thankfully, with the format war behind us, manufacturers can concentrate on making great Blu-ray players, and LG hasn’t stopped its innovation. It was the first to release a BD player with Netflix streaming (BD300) and has upped the ante with its latest player by adding YouTube, Cinema Now, and 802.11n Wi-Fi.

While it’s not as sleek as the Samsung BD-P4600 featured in this roundup, the LG BD390 at least fits into my equipment rack with its more traditional form factor. Aesthetically, it resembles the previous-generation BD300, with a sparsely populated front panel that includes six basic functions (Power, Eject, Play/Pause, etc.) and a covered USB port on the far right-hand side of the unit. Once powered on, the front LCD display is bright and clearly readable from across the room. Unfortunately, it isn’t dimmable.

Rear-panel connections include HDMI 1.3a with x.v.Color support, component, and composite video outputs. Audio outputs include TosLink and digital coaxial, stereo analog, and 7.1-channel analog for consumers with legacy equipment that lacks HDMI inputs. Not to be left out is an Ethernet port for hook-up to a home network security hardware. Users who have Wi-Fi networks can choose to go wireless with the built-in 802.11n Wi-Fi. My only beef with the rear panel is the lack of a second USB input to attach an external drive.

The BD390 is BD-Live compliant with 1 gigabyte of internal memory, which can be expanded by using the USB port on the front panel. It offers internal decoding of Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio and sends it via HDMI as PCM or analog from the 7.1-channel output to a receiver or surround processor. For newer AVRs that offer onboard decoding of the advanced codecs, the LG can also send loss less bitstreams, but the secondary audio with PiP and the clicks and beeps in the menu will be lost in the translation.

User Interface
One area that all three players in this roundup have in common is their remotes all are useless in a dark room. The remote doesn’t have backlighting, but the most common buttons are in the middle of the remote, so they’re easy to access with your thumb. The lower third of the device includes a difficult-to-open sliding section with a number pad, volume and channel controls, and an important Pic Mode button, which lets you access custom picture controls (more on this later).

The BD390’s menu is my favorite in this roundup due to its simplistic design and ease of use. If there isn’t a disc in the player, it greets you with eight icons (Movie, Photo, Music, My Media, Netflix, CinemaNow, YouTube, and Setup). Access to each of these areas is nearly instantaneous, and it’s extremely intuitive to navigate. If you start the player with a disc in the tray, the player will bypass this menu and start the disc.

Player setup is very straightforward, with the usual assortment of opt-ions for Display, Language, Audio, Network, Lock, and Others. Under the Display heading, you can configure your TV aspect ratio and the HDMI color setting (Y/Cb/Cr or RGB). This is also where you configure the resolution, with choices of Auto (using the EDID information from your display), 1080p (24 or 60), 1080i, 720p, 480p, or 480i (component output only).

The Audio menu has a variety of options depending on how the player is connected to your system. For HDMI, things are pretty clear cut either PCM multi-channel for internal decoding or Primary Pass-Thru to bitstream the data to your AVR or surround processor. If you use the TosLink or coaxial output, the BD390 provides a DTS re-encode feature that decodes the lossless formats (Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio) and re-encodes them as 1.5 Mbps DTS output to your AVR.

Configuring the player to connect to my wireless network was a snap. Unlike the Samsung BD-P4600, the LG found my network on its first try. Wireless performance is spotty in my home theater because of its distance to my wireless router. Once I tested the connection, I decided to hook up an Ethernet cable for the remainder of my time with the BD390 to ensure the fastest possible hookup.

Once I had the player configured to my home network security services and completed the user adjustments, I checked to see if there was a new firmware update a common practice with all Blu-ray players and there was (version BD.9.08.33.B). The update took about five minutes to complete, which was similar to my OPPO BDP-83.

As with all Netflix-enabled devices, in order to access this feature, you need a Netflix-generated setup code. You’ll need to enter the code on the Netflix Website in order to pair the player with your account. As with the Samsung BD-P4600, this took very little time, but it required the use of a computer. The BD390 also streams media from any networked PCs using the included software (Nero server). Since I don’t have any DivX or MPEG video files on my computer, I couldn’t test this function.

Video Performance
The BD390 was an excellent performer in all of our HD video processing tests, even on difficult 1080i 2:2 content found on most concert discs. The player sailed through all of the de interlacing tests on the Spears & Munsil High Definition Benchmark Blu-ray Edition. Standard-definition performance was just as impressive, apart from a failure on our 2:2 SD cadence test. When I tested for above-black and below-white data, I discovered that the Standard picture mode wouldn’t pass the above-white information. Luckily, if you press the Pic Adjust button on the remote, you’ll access a User mode, which lets you control contrast, brightness, and other adjustments. Once I clicked over to the User controls, the above-white information was restored.

The only downside to the BD390’s video performance is its scaling ability, which is only average when going from 480i to 1080p. Star Trek: Insurrection on DVD is a decent transfer that looked very good on the Pioneer and Samsung players, but the LG showed off its stellar deinterlacing performance with clear edges on the bridges, boats, and rooftops. But the image was also softer versus the competition. Bright backgrounds revealed ample ringing in the image, and both the foregrounds and the backgrounds lacked sharpness. When I checked the player on a smaller display (50-inch plasma versus 88-inch front projection), the image didn’t look as bad, so your mileage may vary depending on your display.

Real-World Performance
The BD390 is the fastest Blu-ray player I’ve ever used. Its startup time rivals the PS3 and the OPPO BDP-83 at less than 20 seconds. Even with the most Java-intensive titles, you’ll be at the main menu in less than a minute—now that’s fast.Blu-ray playback at 1080p/24 is flawless, and the LG played every title I threw at it, even Dollhouse: Season One and The Soloist, two titles that wouldn’t play on either of the other players in this roundup. Navigation through the menus on Blu-ray Discs is also very speedy, but I had to point the remote directly at the player versus bouncing the signal off of my screen. Granted, I placed the player at the side of my room, but the other players in the roundup didn’t have this problem with similar placements.

Besides superior audio and video quality, Blu-ray also features some neat interactive features such as PiP (picture-in-picture) commentaries and online access. Most of these features worked flawlessly on the LG, but the one exception was Watchmen from Warner. When I watched the film with its Maximum Movie mode, the graphic time line and menus wouldn’t display properly, although the video commentary and PiP worked as advertised. There have been widespread reports of this disc causing issues in other players, and even the OPPO BDP-83 pauses at the 46-second mark (which you can fast-forward through). This may point toward an authoring issue rather than a problem with this player. Other interactive discs from Universal such as Heroes: Season 3 and State of Play worked perfectly with Universal’s U-Control interface.

For the majority of my evaluation, I used the internal audio decoding and output it as PCM to my surround processor, and I never found the sound lacking in any way. Dynamics were excellent, with crisp highs, natural bass, and well-balanced and transparent dialogue, especially on lossless Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio soundtracks.

I don’t have an account with Cinema Now, and after looking over its Website, I’m not inclined to sign up. It has a decent assortment of new movies, but most of them are only in standard definition and cost $4 to rent or $20 to buy. When you compare its cost with Netflix, the latter wins hands down. Frankly, for $20, I’d rather go out and buy the DVD and have a hard copy.

Netflix has a large assortment of standard-def titles and a growing list of HD offerings. The standard-def feed is near DVD quality. The HD streams are nowhere as good as Blu-ray, and the audio is stereo. I never use this service for critical viewing, but it’s handy when you want to watch an old TV show or obscure catalog title without having to wait for it in the mail. The 720p VC-1 high-def feeds have decent quality, but the image doesn’t have the same visual depth and color saturation as Blu-ray nor should it, considering the low bitrate.

With my movie-watching schedule, I rarely have time to watch YouTube videos on my computer, let alone in my home theater. Nevertheless, I enjoyed this added feature, although the entertainment value varies greatly depending on the creator. The interface is very fast like everything else on the player with selections for the top-rated and most viewed videos. YouTube also has a search function, but without a keyboard, it’s cumbersome. The videos start playing in a small window, and you can expand them to full screen by pressing the Display button on the remote. But don’t expect the video quality to blow you away.

Wrap Up
The BD390 has improved its video processing over the BD300, but its scaling of DVDs doesn’t measure up to the category leaders, Pioneer and OPPO. But if you’re looking for a player that’s lightning fast in its user interface and offers a bevy of media streaming options (now including VUDU, which was announced as we went to print), this one is worth a look. Recommended.

Features
BD-Live: Yes (1 GB onboard expandable via USB)
BonusView: Yes
Firmware Version: BD.9.08.33.B
Audio Decoding: DOLBY: Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus; DTS: DTS-HD Master Audio
HDMI Video Resolutions: 1080p/24, 1080p, 1080i, 720p, 480p
Compatible Playback Formats: BD-Video, DVD, DVD-R/-RW, CD, CD-R/-RW, MP3/WMA, JPEG/Kodak PictureCD, VideoCD, AVCHD, DivX HD, MKV
Dimensions (W x H x D, inches): 16.9 x 2.3 x 10.9
Weight (pounds): 6.6

Connections
Outputs: Video: HDMI 1.3a (1), component video (1), composite video (1)
Audio: Coaxial digital (1), optical digital (1), 7.1 channel analog, stereo analog (1)
Additional: Ethernet (1), USB (1), Wi-Fi 802.11n (Draft 2.0) compatible with 802.11 b/g networks