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New blu ray player question
Just a quick question,
to sum up, had a ps3 for playing blu rays, connected to amp via optical, but i will be reciving my 4th ps3 from sony tomorro as they keep breaking, and the warrenty is up in sept, so im going to sell it, and have bought myself a blu ray player. The blu ray player does not have optical, so it is connected to the amp now via coaxial. But the sound, with films in dolby digital, sound like they have the dynamic range set to the lowest, ie no real difference in volume between things such as talking then an explosion. Whereas the ps3 with optical, when there was an explosion you sure as hell knew about it. Is there anything i can do to fix this? does the connection switch mean anything. Avatar which is in DTS sounds the same, its just dolby ones that are quieter. Cant find any setting on the player to help any suggestions will be greatly appreciated its a phillips BDP3000 i belive |
Re: New blu ray player question
Have you tried narrowing the problem down to a component? The amp, cables, raw signal...
Also, is there an EQ or the like maybe playing with it? It's possible you had some kind of processing running on the PS3 too. |
Re: New blu ray player question
Your blue ray player has all the right sound stuff, like true HD, DTS etc, so maybe you need to look at what your amp settings are? Coax is just as good (if not better) transport as optical, all optical gives you is isolation
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Re: New blu ray player question
the amp has settings to set the dynamic range, and they are set to max, the way they wer before, so it must be something to do with the player. Its something i could live with for now i suppose. I start a placement soon so ill have much extra money, might go for a new amp with all the hdmi connectivity.
oh and btw is anyone looking a "brand new" re-manufactured 60GB ps3 with all the origional stuff for £185 haha :) will be with me 2morro |
Re: New blu ray player question
how come the puss3 keeps breaking?
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Re: New blu ray player question
Check which of the devices is doing the DTS / AC3 decoding.
1. The player can be doing it, apply Dynamic Range Control and then send PCM signals to the AMP. 2. The player could be sending bitstream DTS / AC3 to the AMP for the later to do the decoding. Optical vs Coax makes absolutely no difference in sound quality / performance. The signal is digital and only settings in the Player / AMP can influence it. Edit: And you can NOT have Blu-Ray HD audio over Coax or Optical because of the bandwidth limitations. The connection to the amp has to be through HDMI. |
Re: New blu ray player question
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The guy on the phone assures me its a new console....., but ive no idea why they keep breaking, they have all been plugged into a £50 Belkin PureAV surge protector with the filter on it, along with a reciver, freeview + box, sub, xbox 360 and now a blu ray player, none of which ive had a problem with... |
Re: New blu ray player question
sounds like the red ring of death may have jumped species from the xbox? :razz: sorry to hear you've had such a bad time with it mate. xbox 360's are mucho cheap now so it's not a total loss :razz:
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Re: New blu ray player question
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and the fact i no know i cant have all the HD stuff is now gonna annoy me, i may purchase a new amp in the coming months. Cheers for the info. Im asuming with DTS the player/amp has no influence on how it sounds, hence why it is the same, whereas the Dolby Dig does, and is now different? |
Re: New blu ray player question
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