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47 of 48 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Slow in every sense of the word.
PROS: Excellent AQ/PQ for BD. Very good upscaling for DVD. Ability to decode dts-hd MA. Bd-Live enabled. Source-Direct video output option. Sleek design. Sturdy disc-loading tray.

CONS: SLOW operation. DVD layer change delay. KURO Link doesn't work if connected to a KURO TV via non-pioneer receiver. No blue light on Standby/On button as pictured in stock...
Published on May 16, 2009 by Sheedoe

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Pioneer BDP-320 Review--Nice and Slow......
After months of waiting, finally purchased this unit. Picture and Audio quality are steller, that being said, the player itself has some issues. The first and biggest issue is the non "resume" playback feature on Blu-Ray discs. DVD's are fine. When you punch stop once, the player always goes back to square one on Blu-Ray discs, as if you just put the movie in. I have...
Published on June 15, 2009 by B. Head


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47 of 48 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Slow in every sense of the word., May 16, 2009
This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
PROS: Excellent AQ/PQ for BD. Very good upscaling for DVD. Ability to decode dts-hd MA. Bd-Live enabled. Source-Direct video output option. Sleek design. Sturdy disc-loading tray.

CONS: SLOW operation. DVD layer change delay. KURO Link doesn't work if connected to a KURO TV via non-pioneer receiver. No blue light on Standby/On button as pictured in stock photo.

This was my upgrade from the PS3 and as far as PQ/AQ is concerned, I am very satisfied. I've always put image quality over speed, but I've been spoiled by the speedy operation of the PS3. The 320 is slow all around, including: start-up, eject, disc-loading, fast forward/rewind command and BD menu navigation (in certain discs like 'Saawariya'). The worst part for me is having to wait for the disc tray to open during start up. It only takes 30 seconds, but when you are standing in front of the player to put a disc in, and not on your couch, it feels a lot longer.

The DVD Layer-change delay is very annoying. A 2009 BD player should not have this issue, period! Especially Pioneer since its previous generation of players (BDP-51) had been plagued with this issue and they had a long time to correct it for the newer units. Many older DVD players costing 1/10 its price don't even have this problem. Its very dissapointing.

HD picture quality is absolutely stunning. Its slightly better than the mighty PS3. In source-direct (my default setting), the picture is slightly more neutral and less-noisy, as if there is less video processing. You'd have to look hard to find the difference though. SD upscaling is also very good. It comparable to the Reon HQV thats in my AVR. Audio quality is about the same as the PS3 when decoded internally and transmitted via HDMI. However, I find my Onkyo 885 doing a better job at decoding. When bitstreamed, Dolby digital track sounds much more dynamic and robust and the bass is more actively present. I've compared it with the DRC turned off on the player. I haven't tried the analog outputs.

Overall this player is O.K. I would recommend the bdp-51 (its cheaper and has better build) if your AVR can docode the high-res audio and you don't care too much about BD-live. If I had a choice, I would get the Oppo bdp-83 over the 320/51 for about $200 more. Its faster, has an excellent Anchor Bay VRS scaler, ability to play SACD/DVD-Audio, and customer service and product support you can count on to fix bugs (if any). Since the 320 is fairly new and has the potential to accommodate major firmware updates with its larger ROM, it may be possible to improve its performace in the future, but as of now, the player gets 3/5 rating in my book. Pictures posted on customer image section.

Edit (12/28/09): With the latest FW update (ver. 3.41), pioneer has resolved the DVD layer change issue. Coupled with the recent price drop and performance improvements, this is the best blu-ray player in its price range.
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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding Video and Audio, Especially Upconverting!, December 5, 2009
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This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
When buying a blu-ray, or for that matter any dvd/blu-ray player, a great dividing line in quality is the player's ability to upconvert standard dvds. Most manufacturers market their players as "able to upconvert standard dvds to near 1080p levels." But what does this really mean? And are all upconverting players putting out satisfactory upconverted images? And are all upconverted images alike? And most importantly, can a really great upconverted image avoid having to replace all of one's standard dvd library? Well, in light of my experience with the Pioneer 320.....

But before answering the above questions, a word about the basis of this review. I own a Misubishi 54" 1080p rear DLP projector, purchased new about one year ago. Blu-rays are displayed by use of a very good Sony 350 player---a player itself worth buying for use in displaying blu ray dvds (if you can find it). I also have a 110" Grayhawk screen, displaying images from a Sharp 1080i DLP front projector. And, I own many legacy dvds and their blu ray counterparts. The 110" grayhawk is an outstanding real world laboratory for evaluating the ability of a player to "upconvert" standard dvds. A 110" screen, is, in short, unforgiving, as any player's shortcomings are very apparent. So too, however, a player's strengths. And since I can do A/B tests of the same movie in blu-ray v standard upconverted versions, using both the Sharp 1080i and Mitsuibishi 1080p displays, this review is offered for your consideration.

The Pioneer 320 is outstanding in its ability to upconvert standard dvds! The resulting image with most (not all) of my dvds has been astounding. The result is new life and appreciation for my large dvd library. The Pioneer's color and detail abilities are worthy of being marketed as "near 1080p levels". Previously I used a Denon dvd player for use with the 110" grayhawk screen. The Denon is a very good player, but its upconverted images displayed on the 110" screen do not come close to the upconverted dvd images produced by the Pioneer 320. With my Denon, most standard dvds had a grainy unappealing image, sometimes so bad I was forced to reduce the image size. Similiarly, my Sony 320 was less than satisying when upgrading older DVDs. Not so, however, when I use the Pioneer 320.

As with most blu ray players, the Pioneer displays blu rays very well.

Sound: Amazing! Surround sound was very improved with the Pioneer 320, and most importantly, VOCAL INTELLIBILTY is stellar.

And now, a word about criticism over the Pioneer's delay in turn on, chapter search, etc. The pioneer "delay" is often descibed as maddening, nearly 30-45 seconds slower than the faster Oppo 83 when turning on. This criticism may be well intended, but its must ado about nothing. By the way, my Pioneer turn on time etc is faster than that suggested in some reviews posted here. Perhaps the time delay critics' units are early models which have now been sped up by modifications .

In any event, by the time you turn on the player, put in the disc, get to your seat with your favorite beverage, dim the lights, you are ready to go. Movies are to be enjoyed, and the extra seconds (seconds) is an issue only for the very impatient, "I want it right now " crowd. Incidentally, front projectors have a "turn on delay" as well; expect a minute or so before quality imaging is possible. The projector must warm up too. So the best strategy for the very impatient: (1) Turn on the Pioneer blu ray, then (2) turn on the projector (or whatever ) then (3) select disc then (4) put in disc (in a now booted up and ready to load Pioneer blu ray player). Finally, Go to seat: push play! And you wont have missed a thing. Not a second.

Upconverted images produced by most players really turn out to be very disappointing, especially when comparing the standard dvd images to blu-ray images. The satisfaction gap grows wider with the width of the screen. Viewing upconverted images on most players well supports a conclusion that the old legacy dvds must be replaced, especially where the image is displayed on a large screen. Of course, Blu ray dvds, without question, do offer a "better picture" over their standard dvd versions (all things being equal in use of source material, etc). But can the PQ " satisfaction gap" between blu ray and standard dvd movies be narrowed such that most standard dvds look great, even on a large screen? Yes, at least with the Pioneer 320!

With my equipment, the difference between the images of blu-rays on my Sony 350/ 54" Mitsuibishi and images of upconverted standard dvds on the Grayhawk/ Pioneer 320 are usually very minor, despite viewing the Pioneer's upconverted images on a very large screen . Of course, poorly done dvds still look, well, poorly done. An example is the Dirty Harry DVD----that is one I must replace with a blu ray version in order to enjoy it on the big screen. Fortunately, poor quality dvds constitute but a small percentage of my dvds. The point here is that the Pioneer 320 player usually produces very satisfying upconverted images on a very large screen.

The Pioneer's audio/video performance is wonderful. Its solid build quality and A/V qualities easily reveal that Pioneer put its design attention and money largely into A/V values, that is, picture and sound. I think thats where our consumer money should be spent as well! Current pricing makes the Pioneer 320 the player to buy if the Oppo 83 ($500) is too much for your budget. With the Oppo, well, you will get 15-30 seconds or so of faster turn on time, and I would bet a slight improvement in AQ/PQ over the Pioneer 320. But for bang for the buck , I suggest you give the Pioneer 320 a home test; you wont be disappointed! Big Thumbs Up!!!
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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Good player but not a big improvement over BDP-51FD, May 3, 2009
This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
I have a BDP-320 hooked up to a Kuro PDP-5020FD. Set-up was very quick with most settings being automatic between the two Pioneer devices. The only manual setting change I had to make to the BDP-320 was to set the output to Source Direct.

The 320's deinterlacing was inferior to the Kuro. I used Hot Fuzz as a test DVD and the 320 produced noticeable jagged edges on the white Metropolitan Police logo on the character's black vest. Changing to Source Direct cleared up any artifacts and made for the best DVD picture on my Kuro yet. On some other DVD material (LOTR) I found the best image to be when the BDP-320 is upconverting and the PDP-5020FD is deinterlacing. Either way the BDP-320 gives you all the flexability you need to get the best possible picture from your setup.

The sound quality of BD using the optical digital out is noticeably improved over DVD. There is greater definition in the low frequency and it seems that sound placement is more well defined. These are subjective observations, but I was surprised to notice a difference. This makes me more likely to upgrade my receiver to a newer model that can handle the losseless audio formats over HDMI.

Although the BDP-320 is my first BDP, from what I can tell it is not a big improvement to Pioneers previous model the BDP-51FD. Owners of both claim the load times, picture quality, sound quality and DVD layer change response are nearly identical. The improvements of the BDP-320 are a reduced chassis height, increase ROM size (good for the firmware engineers at Pioneer so good for you to), out-of-the-box support for DTS HD MA, great BD compatibility, and built-in BD-Live with included 1GB memory and LAN. I hope that the BDP-320's larger ROM will allow future firmware updates to push its perfomance past the BDP-51FD.

Times using The Dark Night with BD-Live
Power off to tray opened - 27s
Press tray close to WB logo - 42s
Press tray close to start of movie - 1m.53s

I'm very happy with my purchase but was surprised that the load times were not improved over the Pioneer BDP-51. (Okay, I was very happy with the BDP-320 but the DVD layer change delay was not acceptable. The BDP-320 was retuned, and an Oppo BDP-83 is its replacement.)

The player's build quality is solid and heavy. The picture quality is the best I have seen on my PDP-5020. Anyone who claims BD is not much improved over DVD is not doing it right. Although DVD looks nice, BD is dramatically improved in both color depth, black level as well as simply having a higher pixel count.

The BDP-320 being of the same PQ/SQ of the BPD-51FD makes it one of the best players on the market. I suggest reading reviews of the BDP-51FD and keeping in mind the improvements of the BDP-320.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Things Come to Those Who Wait (and Wait...), October 21, 2009
This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
With the Pioneer BDP-320, Pioneer has finally begun offering a fully functioned Blu-ray Disc player with Profile 2.0 support (BD-Live), and unlike many competitive models, the BDP-320 has enough on-board storage (1 GB) so that BD-Live works right out of the box with no need for a USB drive or SD memory card. The BDP-320 also offers excellent video and audio performance, including both Blu-ray playback and DVD upconversion. That's the Good News.

The bad news is that this player is slow... really slow. Slow to boot (20 seconds) and slow to load (over a minute to get to the first screen of a BD-JAVA based Blu-ray Disc - even longer to get to the menu). When you compare it to the OPPO BDP-83, the differences are pretty substantial: 34 seconds to load a standard DVD on the Pioneer (11 seconds on the OPPO), 42 seconds to load a basic Blu-ray Disc (19 seconds on the OPPO) and 1 minute 6 seconds to load a BD-Java Disc (35 seconds on the OPPO). If you put on a crazy BD-Live-heavy Blu-ray title like "Crank 2" in the drawer, then you may as well press play *before* you start making the popcorn. Chances are it will still be loading when you get back.

Also missing from the BDP-320 is any sort of IPTV or web streaming functionality. No Netflix, Amazon Videos-on-demand or VUDU. If you only want your Blu-ray Disc player to play Blu-ray Discs (and CDs and DVDs), then this will not be an issue for you, but once you've experienced the convenience (not to mention value) of Netflix instant streaming or Amazon video on demand, it's hard to go back. Of course, if your TV already has these features, then you don't have to worry about it being in the player.

In terms of video performance, the BDP-320 is top notch. Other than a slight delay locking to film-based sources (3:2 cadence) and some really minor issues with diagonal filtering (jaggies), the player is very good at upconverting standard DVDs to 1080p. And if you'd prefer to outsource the de-interlacing and scaling to an outboard processor or high-end display, Pioneer's "Source Direct" feature will output discs in their native resolution (1080p/24 Blu-rays at 1080p/24, 1080i Blu-rays at 1080i/60 and standard DVDs at 480i). And Blu-ray Discs, as on most players, look simply stunning on the Pioneer player.

On the audio side, although the set-up menus are a bit confusing, the player can and does decode all Blu-ray audio formats (including DTS-HD Master Audio and Dolby TrueHD) to either multi-channel PCM (over HDMI) or to multi-channel analog outputs (5.1 or 7.1). This multi-channel analog output is helpful if you've got an older receiver that lacks HDMI audio support. Unlike many competitive models (Panasonic DMP-BD80 and Samsung BD-P3600, for example), the Pioneer player allows you to increase (not just decrease) subwoofer level output over the multi-channel analog outputs. Though I found I had to crank this up to the max (+6 dB) and adjust the analog gain for the subwoofer input on my preamp to its max in order to get decent bass over the analog outputs. But this is common to all Blu-ray players with multi-channel analog outputs due to the way low bass is stored and transmitted over analog connections.

Really the only things keeping me from an unqualified recommendation of the Pioneer are the slow loading times and the lack of video streaming capabilities. If neither of these issues is important to you, then the BDP-320 will make a fine addition to your home theater system.

A complete review is available on big picture big sound (dot com).
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Pioneer BDP-320 Review--Nice and Slow......, June 15, 2009
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This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
After months of waiting, finally purchased this unit. Picture and Audio quality are steller, that being said, the player itself has some issues. The first and biggest issue is the non "resume" playback feature on Blu-Ray discs. DVD's are fine. When you punch stop once, the player always goes back to square one on Blu-Ray discs, as if you just put the movie in. I have done one firmware upgrade already, and that helped the eject time, which was terrible out of the box, and is still slower than any other DVD player I have ever owned. Load times on 50 GB discs seem to take an eternity, although that may be disc related. Also the layer switch on DVD's is annoying, 2-3 seconds at least. Perhaps with later firmware updates things will get better/faster....I hope....
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent player, especially w/Pioneer Plasma TV., January 1, 2010
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This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
I've had a Sony BDP S550 for over a year and have been less than impressed with its ability to upscale normal DVDs to 1080p which is the resolution of my television. I purchased this pioneer unit last week and have been more than pleased with its ability to produce clear, sharp images on my 1080p plasma from regular DVDs.

Lets face it, MOST Blur-Ray players play Blu-Ray disks just fine. Its their performance on normal DVDs where they stand apart - and this Pioneer unit is the best I've seen!
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Blu-ray Player Within Its Price Range, June 16, 2009
This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
I tried out many blu-ray players and this Pioneer blu-ray player is the best one. It offers the best picture quality within it price range and it has an option to make the image even better with its built in picture adjustments. The analog audio outputs sound quality is excellent especially listening to audio cds. This player has slower loading times than its competition, but its worth the wait due do its excellent picture quality. This blu-ray player also looks good and has very good build quality.

I recommend this blu-ray player to anyone who don't care about loading times, but care about picture quality and sound quality.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Won't play Shout Factory blu-ray discs., August 24, 2010
By 
M. Kleypas (Kansas City, Missouri USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
I put off buying a blu-ray player until recently, but when Shout Factory started releasing their Roger Corman's Cult Classics Collection on blu-ray, I finally broke down and bought my BDP-320 to play them on (6/18/10). The problem? As of Firmware version 3.65, it will not play these discs. Not at all. It seems to play other discs fine, with great picture, great sound, no problems. It just won't play the Shout Factory discs. I contacted both Pioneer and Shout Factory about the problem. I got no response at all from Pioneer. Shout Factory was at least responsive about it; they say that it's a firmware issue, that Pioneer is aware of it, and that Pioneer is working on a fix. So I'm waiting for a firmware update to correct the problem, but I'm not happy.

10/2/10 - still no firmware update.

Firmware update 3.69a - wouldn't install.

2/4/11 - Installed firmware update 3.70 which seems to have fixed the problem. If the machine had worked this well out of the box I would probably have given it 4 out of 5 stars, but almost eight months of dinking around with it has left a sour taste in my mouth, and we wound up buying another player (a Philips BDP7320) in the meantime.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Nice player, June 20, 2010
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This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
Comparing this to my Sony s360, it is a little slower on playing any disc, only by a few seconds to me it really doesn`t matter. The picture quality on blu-ray is outstanding, regular disc up converts better than my Sony. My opinion where this player shines is on the audio side,on my surround sound I hear noises i`ve never heard before it sounds great.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Best player in $325 space - excellent upscaling, PQ, & AQ, but not fast, May 30, 2009
This review is from: Pioneer BDP-320 1080p Blu-ray Disc Player (Electronics)
I have been using this device for nearly 75 days and have been incredibly happy with it. I owned a 51 and expected similar performance, which I got. I also own the new Oppo Blu Ray player and must say this is hands down the next best bang for your buck and nearly $200 less. Its load times are slow and it struggles with some DVD layer changes, but overall PQ, AQ, and tweakability are top notch. Expect roughly 25 seconds to power up. SD upscaling is very good and have not encountered any trouble with deinterlacing that has cause jaggies or moire.
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