Denon DBP-1611UD review | TechRadar
Denon DBP-1611UD test data Power consumption (Watts): Idle: 15W The idling figure is slightly higher than most 3D decks. Playing: 17W Slapping on a disc nudges it up by a couple of Watts. Audio...
Faulty Denon DBP-2010 or DBP-1611UD? | AVForums
Unfortunately there appears to be a fault with the power supply. The times I have been able to use it I've been blown away by the picture quality and sound over my PS3 slim. I've been offered either a refund, a new DBP-1611UD as a replacement or I can have the 2010 returned to Denon to be fixed. Basically I'm looking for advice on my best option.
Denon DBP-2010 review | TechRadar
Denon's Blu-ray players fall into two camps – high-end behemoths and performance focused 'affordable' decks that still cost twice as much as your average model. The Denon DBP-2010 belongs...
Denon DBP-2010 review | What Hi-Fi?
Things start off well with an impressive list of specifications: the DBP-2010 is Profile 2.0-enabled, with an Ethernet socket on the back and an SD card slot that blends into the front display. Disc-compatibility is impressive, and includes AVCHD and DivX file formats among others. Bitstreaming and onboard decoding of HD audio formats are
Denon DBP-1611UD Universal Blu Player First Look | Audioholics
The Denon DBP-1611UD is the new entry level Blu-ray player from the electronics giant. At $399, not only is it a very affordable player, it's the cheapest Universal player we've ever seen. For those that don't know, a Universal player is one that not only plays DVDs, CDs, and Blu-rays but also DVD-Audio and SACD discs.
- Does Denon dbp-1611ud really matter?
- Butterflies in the n'avi jungle catch the eye where previously they blended in to the background. Overall, if you can live with the imperfections of its operating system, Denon's DBP-1611UD certainly delivers the goods where it truly matters in an AV context – in the Blu-ray department.
- Is Denon's dbp-1611ud a good 3D Blu-ray deck?
- Find out more about how we test. Denon's first 3D Blu-ray deck, the DBP-1611UD, looks like it could be a decent proposition for anyone with a cutting-edge 3D-capable AVR to take care of the sonic side of things.
- How does the dbp-1611ud work?
- With HDMI and Ethernet cables connected, you're set to go, as the DBP-1611UD automatically configures itself. Upscaling of all discs is automatic, but if judder does occur, a dedicated HDMI mode button on the remote control lets you opt out of 1080p24 delivery.
- Is the dbp-1611ud a good deck?
- But Blu-ray and DVD playback are where the DBP-1611UD has to earn its corn and in both respects this is an exceptional deck. The Spears and Munsil HD test disc shows how accurate the colour fidelity is, how smooth images move and how exceptional detail is even in the most gloomy of scenes.
- Does the dbp-1611ud win a prize?
- The DBP-1611UD won't win any prizes for the design of its menu system. Aesthetically, it's light years behind those in current circulation from the likes of Sony, Samsung and LG, but worse are some of the illogical navigation steps you sometimes have to take. There's a home screen, but annoyingly, disc playback is excluded from this.
- Is dbp-2012ud better than dvd-a1ud?
- The step-up £750 DBP-2012UD (due on sale soon) has multi-channel outputs and superior construction, whilst the aging (and expensive) DBP-4010UD and flagship DVD-A1UD both lack networking and 3D fun and games.