In fact 90% of the time I am very happy to use my $89 Toshiba XDE-500 to watch DVD.
Oh boy...
You have to be one of the first end users of the XDE upscaling DVD player I have "spoken" with who has found this deck to be anything but reliable or suitable for crisp, clean DVD playback...
Try even a PS3 slim, you may be surprise how good it is, watching DVD movies. It won't be as good as your 83, but it will be close.
I doubt that -- but regardless, I would
never use a gaming console as a primary disc player for film playback, regardless of how many do use the PS3 as a DVD/BD player; I realize this system can do CDs, BDs, DVDs, etc. but I just don't like the idea of serious film watching left to a gaming device (its primary role).
Well at least we are in agreement on this one. I have a few DVD, including newer ones such as 'Finding Neverland' that even Oppo cannot do much about. And then I have a few that can truly compete with some piss poor BRs.
What was wrong on the DVD transfer of
Finding Neverland? Was it that bad? Most of the titles I'm talking about when I spoke of the BDP-83's inability to make them look any better were older, back catalog titles that are just riddled with so much noise and compression problems, it's worth turning the disc off and going to sleep -- examples include HBO Home Video's release of the Rutger Hauer/C Thomas Howell classic
The Hitcher (one of the most horrid DVD transfers I've ever seen, with a snowy, staticky noise and grain that litters almost every scene -- it makes the film look like it was taped off an over-the-air station from a TV with rabbit ears), the Goodtimes Home Video release (Full Screen 4:3 version with the uncut music tracks which make this film, hence the reason I will only own this version and not Universal's subsequently released "cut" edited version) of the Sly Stallone/Rutger Hauer camp classic
Nighthawks (much like The Hitcher, with ridiculous artifacting, noise and garbage all over the transfer; it's really ugly) or even slightly newer titles like Warner's edge-enhanced, ugly-looking
No Reservations with Catherine Zeta Jones, which appears with nasty ringing and artifacting around every character and object in every frame of the film -- don't know what went wrong there, but my Oppo BDP-83 won't clean this transfer up, even with Noise Reduction engaged...
I do too, as I have quite a few DVDs in my collection. I also enjoy Netflix and fortunately my Kuro does a decent job upscaling. Again, it is not that I don't value upconversion/scaling. It is just that I find my other players can do the job almost as good as the Oppo. Back to the 83 vs 93, from reviews I read, the 93 scores as well as the 83 in synthetic tests. I doubt one performs better than the other and if you are looking for direct, certifiable differences I am not sure if you will find one. If you do, I hope you would share the information as I would be very curious to know the outcome.
Well, I will take your word for your intention explanation here, but I was merely going by the statements you made in the previous post with regard to the DVD upscaling issue being beat to death too much and the way I took your other statements to mean you felt most players do the same kind of job for this duty -- I clearly saw a difference, as I said, between my Panasonic and the Oppo...there's no comparison, and DVDs didn't just look like DVD between these two machines; there was an immediate difference.
As for comparing the two Oppos, if I ever get some kind of concrete evidence or information, I will be sure to let you know -- this is being discussed in detail on forums like Blu-ray.com and AVS but I don't think there has been any conclusions formulated on whether or not the BDP-95 performs any "better" on DVD upscaling than the 83.
Okay I understand. You are right, for me, I actually wish if Oppo would offer a lower cost audio only player. I also would not have bothered with the Oppo had I not replaced my 4308 with the AV7005. The Marantz cannot do MCH SACD and DVDA so I had to do something.
Well, if that's what you needed, that's what you needed -- we all have our demands and requirements. Me, not getting into SACD or DVD-Audio and also always keeping my audio system separated from the home theater, didn't need a player with superior analog interfaces out back or support for these formats; all I wanted and required was superior DVD upscaling for my massive collection and bitstreaming capability for TrueHD and Master Audio, which is kind of a given now (but wasn't when I bought my first generation Panasonic BD player).