| Brand Name: | Onkyo |
| Color Name: | Black |
| Brand Name: | Onkyo |
| Color Name: | Black |
Product Details
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
56 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Yet Another Disappointing Funai Clone from Onkyo,
By
This review is from: Onkyo DV-BD507 Blu-ray Disc Player, Black (Electronics)
SUMMARY: The Onkyo DV BD507 shares a similarly uncomfortable position with the Harman Kardon BDP-1: The MSRP of $449 or $499 for this player is comical in this marketplace. This player makes sense around $250 and struggles to make a value propositon for much more than that. At current street prices of $399 (8/20), I would encourage you to pass.
I have been running this player through a wide array of BD and SD DVD material. BD performance is excellent and identical to most other players for 1080p 24fps. DVD performance is compotent, but not exceptional. I will say that it is improved in some regard to the 606 that there is not a reddish push causing faces to look either flush or tanned depending on lighting. Colors in general are accurate and I do think in real world content it keeps shadow detail and avoids crushing black. In respects of moire and jaggies, the performance is good. I watched Rome Season 2 with a number of panning shots that offer ample material for moire. My biggest criticism is the lack of detail reproduction. There is still noise that dulls images. Text shows aliasing and lacks crispness; most images are soft at the end of the day. I played with the three NR settings and could notquite find a happy balance. With the highest NR setting (3), speckling did appear on solid light colors like actors' foreheads. I did some A/Bing with the Oppo, Denon 2010, Pioneer 320, and Onkyo 507. The ABT chips in the Denon and Oppo cleaned up the image well to provide more detail, which provided greater distinction between images and background, providing more depth to the image. The onkyo suffered in this regard. The Pioneer arrived between the two. This player probably uses the same panasonic chip as the Denons and has the same menus and guis. Unfortunately, it does not have quite the same build quality and finish. The attached power cord, remote, and analogue section are not as impressive as the denon. The player only offers coaxial digital output and two channel analogues. Audio quality from the two channel analogue outputs is good, but does not seem to offer the range of the burr browns. This is most apparent in listening to music. Remote is cheap and light - it is absolutely identical to the 606's and those in the $100 Magnavox players you see at wal-mart. It is neither backlit nor glows. It lacks a zoom function. GUI/Menus are nearly identical to the Onkyo 606: blue background with quick setup menu and customize option containing more detailed adjustments. The basic tree/branch setup is identical to the current denons as well. There is an option to update the firmware via disc or the internet. The current firmware version shows up as 1.0 and no newer versions are available over the internet. Operation is very similar to the 606 in respects of speed. Powered off eject times come in right at 13 seconds. Toggling through menus is quick and responsive. Load times have incrementally improved from the 606, but are still disappointing relative to some of the quicker players on the market: Casino Royale to Sony Screen: JVC: 18 seocnds Pioneer 320: 36 seconds Onkyo 606: 45 seconds Onkyo 507: 37 seconds Dark Knight to AntiPiracy: JVC: 17 seocnds Pioneer 320: 42 seconds Onkyo 606: 43 seconds Onkyo 507: 38 seconds Pirates I Black Pearl: Coin/Disney JVC: Medallion 16 seconds; Disney 27 seconds Pio 320: Medallion 44 seconds; Medallion 1 min 13 seconds Onkyo 606: Medallion 42; Disney 1 min 2 seconds Onkyo 507: Medallion 42; Disney 57 seconds Deinterlacing Performance Using S&M Test Disc's Synthetic Tests Source Adaptive Deinterlacing Cadence: Racecar testing for moire in stands * denotes lock on in second set. Test: JVC / onkyo 606 / onkyo 507 2:2 pass/ fail / pass 2:2:2:4 pass / fail / fail 2:3:2:3 (PF-T) pass/ pass / pass 2:3:2:3 pass / pass / pass 2:3:3:2 pass/ fail / fail 3:2:3:2:2 pass/ fail / fail 5:5 pass/ fail / marginal 6:4 pass/ fail / fail 8:7:8:7 pass/ marginal / fail 24p - pass /pass / pass Time-adjusted fail / marginal / fail Edge Adaptive Test Patterns Jaggie test - JVC Speedometer: pass 45 to 5. fail +/- 5, pass -45 to -5 Ship: pass horizontal scrolling text: pass vertical scrolling text: pass Jaggie test - Onkyo DV BD606 Speedometer: pass 45 to 5. fail +/- 5, pass -45 to -5 Ship: marginal horizontal scrolling text: pass vertical scrolling text: pass Jaggie test - Onkyo DV BD507 Speedometer: pass 45 to 5. fail +/- 10 Ship: pass horizontal scrolling text: pass vertical scrolling text: pass It is not a pioneer 320: it lacks the audio quality and capability (7.1 outputs), the Pioneer 320 is a more capable upscaler, and the pioneer has a slicker interface and more detailed setup options. With the Pioneer hovering around $300 street prices, the Onkyo without analogues or a strong upscaling chip/capability will suffer to offer value except for those adamant on matching their bd player with their onkyo receiver. For those that hell bent on setup symmetry, I would steer you towards the heavily discounted 606, which can be had for roughly $250. For the rest of us, the JVC XV-BP1 offers better performance, faster operation, and is significantly cheaper. It may lack the tweaking menus of the Onkyo, but I found them ineffective in finding a significantly improved image from the default.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very good blu-ray,
By T1UP "T1UP" (Browder, KY) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Onkyo DV-BD507 Blu-ray Disc Player, Black (Electronics)
I purchased this to lessen the load on our PS3, and I must say that I am impressed. We have this mated to an Onkyo TX-SR607 receiver. I really don't know if it was limitations of our PS3, but it took our blu-rays to a new level as far as surround sound goes. The picture is excellent as well. Hook up, & set up was very easy. The remote is ok, but we control it from the receiver's remote, so not a big deal. I haven't tried every blu-ray player, but this one is probably on the slow side as far as load up times, however this does not bother me as I have yet to run across a movie that I need to start in 5 seconds. This player is probably not worth the regular price, but for what I found it for on Amazon during a sale(approx $170), I would consider it a steal.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Onkyo fan,
This review is from: Onkyo DV-BD507 Blu-ray Disc Player, Black (Electronics)
The image quality from both Blu Ray and the up-scaling of standard DVD's is outstanding with this player. Blu Ray's are expected to look "eye popping" but I've never seen standard DVD look this good on our HDTV. I couldn't be happier with this player and highly recommend for anyone looking for a better quality player than the standard LG, Sony, Samsung, etc. junk that is out there. It doesn't have wifi but I didn't buy it for that. I bought it for one reason and one reason only.... the best video reproduction available and on that this machine is tops in my opinion. Sound quality is also excellent. If you want an internet streamer buy the Roku. It's better than any of the run of the mill disc player / streamers. If you want the best Blu Ray player then buy this player. I bought this player when it was on sale for $299. There is no rival to this player anywhere near that price. And Onkyo is as good as it gets at any price.
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