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45 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars High Quality, Great Price
After doing a considerable amount of research on 'home theatre in a box' systems, I decided to pick the Toshiba SD-43HT system. My budget was between $250-$300. This was actually priced lower than that, so that was a bonus. More money to spend on DVDs!

First - the DVD playback. This is progresive scan, and I have an HDTV. My old DVD player which I've had for a...

Published on August 7, 2003 by Alex Carter

versus
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Repair of SD-43HTSU "Hello...Protection...Goodbye"
The Toshiba SD-43HTSU and at least one other Toshiba system has a high failure rate. The unit comes on, displays "Hello...Protection...Goodbye" and shuts off.

Search of the web and a call to Toshiba both blame the problem on C27. For those not electronically minded, that is a Capacitor number 27.

This particular capacitor is a 100uF...
Published on December 28, 2005 by John L. Addis


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45 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars High Quality, Great Price, August 7, 2003
By 
Alex Carter (Des Moines, IA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
After doing a considerable amount of research on 'home theatre in a box' systems, I decided to pick the Toshiba SD-43HT system. My budget was between $250-$300. This was actually priced lower than that, so that was a bonus. More money to spend on DVDs!

First - the DVD playback. This is progresive scan, and I have an HDTV. My old DVD player which I've had for a couple of years was not progressive scan, so I was really looking forward to seeing what the big deal was with progressive scan.

Wow!

After I got the systen set up I popped in "The Fast and the Furious" and cued up the first race scene. The picture was amazing! It is worth noting that I also picked up some Monster Component cables which should also be helping in giving a great picture. The picture was razor sharp and the color was very vivd and true to life. Remember when you first switched over from VHS to DVD? That is what it is like jumping from "regular DVD" to progressive scan on this system. Wow.

Next - the sound. This system comes with 5 satellite speakers plus a subwoofer. The sub is not powered, it is passive and gets 70 watts. The satellites are 50 watts/channel. So the sound system comes in at under 400 watts. Most systems in this price range come in around 500, so it isn't as powerful. However, this sytem has excellent sound. Again, the race scene in TF&F looked excellent, and the surround sound was awesome. Very clean, pure digital sound. The subwoofer boomed, and the satellites held there own. It is plenty of power for me. You probably aren't going to "feel" the sub like you would on a high-end system, but thats ok. This system pumps out the sound very well.

I plugged my digital cable box into the DVD player/reciever and was plesantly suprised to hear very clean, clear 5.1 surround sound coming out of it. So now recgular televsion can be enjoyed in surround sound! Also, CDs sound great. It even read my MP3 Cd with no problem!

Overall I am very happy. I got what I paid for. This is not a $3,000 home theatre system. But it packs a punch for the price for sure. Definitly worth checking out.

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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Repair of SD-43HTSU "Hello...Protection...Goodbye", December 28, 2005
By 
John L. Addis (Beaverton OR USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
The Toshiba SD-43HTSU and at least one other Toshiba system has a high failure rate. The unit comes on, displays "Hello...Protection...Goodbye" and shuts off.

Search of the web and a call to Toshiba both blame the problem on C27. For those not electronically minded, that is a Capacitor number 27.

This particular capacitor is a 100uF (microfarad) with a voltage rating of 16V. I have replaced C27 with a 100uF rated at 25V on the theory that excess voltage was the problem. So far so good. The unit works again!

To replace this capacitor (which costs less than a dollar at an electronics supply store), first remove the top cover. C27 is labeled in small print on the main board (biggest and below all other boards) near the center of the instrument. You will have to remove the bottom board entirely, which looks complicated but is not really too bad. To get at the main board, and unsolder C27, you have to remove the main board.

Do not worry about getting the connectors back where they came from. They are all keyed so that they go in only one way and the semi-permanent bend in the wires makes it pretty obvious where all the connectors go and which way.

In the way is a vertical board which runs from front to back. This vertical board is also attached permanently to a 3" X 5" board attached to the rear panel via the video input and output connectors. Both boards come out together if you unfasten the 3" X 4" board from the rear panel. The vertical board makes connection to the main board in two places with edge connectors on the vertical board. Note how they fit into the main board.

Remove every screw from the rear panel except those holding the fan and those holding the antenna connectors to the rear panel.

Carefully pull out the two flat cables from the center vertical board and one between the AM/FM tuner (small board in the left rear corner of instrument) to the 3" X 5" board. One connector with individual wires connects to the DVD assembly. It is soldered to the main board, but the connector comes out easily at the DVD assembly end.

Pull the sides of the instrument apart very slightly to unsnap the rear panel from the instrument. One connector below the 3" X 5" board connects to the power supply board directly beneath the 3" X 5" board. My instrument has a toroid around that cable...yours may not.

Pull out all the connectors to the main board and remove the 6 screws holding it to the bottom of the chassis. Remove the one screw toward the front of the instrument holding the vertical board in place.

Now you can tip the main board up and get to the back. Note that the capacitor has a minus sign on it. You must replace the old capacitor in the same orientation. The minus sign points to the left of the instrument. Unsolder C27 and replace with 100uF/25V.

Be sure you have connected all the cables up again when you reassemble the unit.

The whole job should take less than an hour and it sure beats the price of the repair or shipment to Toshiba.

I am visiting in Panama at the moment and Toshiba has no repair and no warranty here.
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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cheap, Effective, Outstanding!, November 4, 2003
By 
Michael Alvarez (Arlington, VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
Earlier this year I was shopping around for a good surround sound system and all I could find were $800 - $1000 Sony or JVC systems at my local retailers Best Buy and Circuit City. I shopped around amazon once and found this great system for only $250! So I snagged it up fearing that it would be gone soon and it has been great. It works perfectly and sounds 10 times better than my parents JVC $1000 surround sound system. It's extremely powerful sound wise, and visually. Also music sounds great on it for parties. Also it plays every kind of cd you could ever think of: VCD, SVCD, DVD-R, MP3 etc. I suggest snagging this great deal immediatly before to many people find out about it and it's sold out. I love mine! No complaints.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a great region-free home theater system on a budget, December 24, 2003
By 
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
PROS: easy to set up; solid video and sound; handles layer changes well; region-free
CONS: limited A/V in/out; slow to open DVD tray; clunky 'time remaining/elapsed' displays

I am satisfied Toshiba customer. I bought my first DVD player (a Toshiba SD-1200) in March 2000, and it's worked perfectly to this day. So when I felt it was time to upgrade to surround sound, it's no surprise that, after comparing prices and features of competing brands, I decided on the Toshiba SD-43HT. If you're like me, and you want to take advantage of Dolby 5.1 and DTS tracks on DVDs without spending thousands of dollars on equipment, this entry-level system is a great value at under $300.

The color coded wires make it easy to set up right out of the box. The wires are 18 gauge and 50' in length for the rear speakers, 25' (I think) for the front. You may want to upgrade to a lower gauge and replace these generic wires when you can. However, the wire connecting the subwoofer is permanently soldered on--and is extremely difficult to untie when first setting up the system. Toshiba should have really used twist-ties when packaging this system!

Some home theaters offer 60 or even 70 watts/speaker of power, but I think these 50 watts speakers provide plenty of volume for even a larger sized room. The experienced audiophile may balk at the quality of the sound, but for the typical listener, this system is more than sufficient. Listening to the DTS mix on my Hero DVD is an amazing experience. You'll never be able to watch a movie without surround again. Advanced users may also like to tweak controls like the midi/bass/treble controls, but there are none to be found on this system, only levels and delays. (I haven't played any CDs, but I would suggest the user who finds the subwoofer dominating his music to turn down the s/w level.)

The Toshiba SD-43HT offers stunning video quality. I have an older television, so I can't comment on the SD-43HT's progressive scan, but I'm sure it's even *more* stunning. The unit has composite video, s-video, and component outs. I've never encountered layer changes on DVDs where I know layer changes to occur, such as in the LOTR Two Towers extended edition. As for features, the player fast forwards in 2x, 4x, 8x and 32x. It has a zoom capability of 1.5x, 2x and 3x. There's JPEG slideshow and mp3 playback, and AM/FM radio. VCDs burned onto CD-R and CD-RW discs play fine.

Finally, if appearances are important, this unit is pretty stylish looking. The player/receiver is slim, and the speakers and subwoofer don't look cheap and bulky like some brands. It's silver and gray so it looks nice against white and black surroundings.

Now, for some negatives: There is no audio out, which makes dubbing DVDs impossible. But more importantly, you can't take the player to a friend's house, connecting with a regular composite A/V cable, and leave the speakers at home. Also, the system offers only a digital optical input. This is compatible with the Playstation 2 and XBox, but a lot of digital cable boxes are coaxial digital (they have orange plugs that say SPDIF) and if your cable box is like mine, you'll need to be buy a digital optical cable, a coaxial digital cable, and a coaxial digital to digital optical converter to enjoy 5.1 sound from TV broadcasts.

It takes almost ten seconds for the DVD tray to open. My old Toshiba SD-1200 opened in two seconds. You will be standing in front of your player, holding a DVD, tapping your foot, and saying 'Open, already!' Another minor problem: the SD-1200 would give the title elapsed, title remaining, chapter elapsed and chapter remaining all with one press of the DISPLAY button. The Toshiba people were clearly trying to minimize the text on screen, but it's annoying to have to click the REMAIN button and cycle through all the time options. It also 'pops' the audio when it goes from one option to the next.

Most surprisingly, this system can be made region-free with a simple hack. Turn the player on without a disc. Press 'Enter' on the remote, then '8-4-2-6-9,' 'Enter' again, and the player should turn off automatically. (If for some reason it doesn't, try turning it off yourself.) The next time you turn the player on, it should be region free. If doesn't, your player was manufactured differently. I tested using region 0, 1, 2 and 4 DVDs, interchanging them, and they all work perfectly -- no hiccups. The PAL colors look fine on my NTSC set. However, the internal conversion doesn't work correctly with PAL widescreen. (It takes a 16:9 image and makes it 4:3.) No problems with PAL full screen, obviously.

The Toshiba SD-43HT is terrific. Easy to set up. The quality of sound and video is the best for the price. The features match anything else on the market. It just looks great in your living room. And it's region-free. (I really just wished the player had a composite audio out, the tray opened faster, and that it could handle PAL widescreen.) I recommend this system to anyone who's looking for a home theater experience on a budget!

UPDATE: Ten months later and I'm still loving my Toshiba SD43HT. No problems whatsoever.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unbelievable value, October 4, 2003
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
I've been around audio/video equipment for a couple of decades, and I've seen $15,000 components (Farouja line doubler) or their equivalent go down to a small fraction of their price over the years. This is a fabulous example of how economic forces have forced prices down. I set mine up today and I can hardly believe the quality of the picture and sound (for picture quality, of course, you need a monitor capable of 720 or whatever the number of lines progressive scan DVD players put out). Now for sound, I've been around high-fi nuts since the early '50's, when some of the stuff was hardly in enclosed cabinets. You might not get better sound quality than this item puts out until you get into thousands of dollars, plus an acoustically correct room. Go for this, and spend the savings on DVD's.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unbelievable Picture And Sound Quality....And CHEAP!!!!, November 24, 2003
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
I just hooked up this bad boy to my 36"(non-hdtv) Sony a few days agao, and I can honestly say that it is the best electronics investment I have made in recent memory.

Ease of Set-up: It took me about 20 minutes from the time I unpacked the unit and speakers until I was watching my first movie. The wires(see cons below) are all color coded which makes it that much simpler. The unit just slipped in where my previous dvd player sat.

Visually: The unit is very sleek and modern looking, with a mirrored front, and silver finish. It looks like something you would see sitting in a living room of the future. The subwoofer and satellites are also in a silver finish.

Picture Quality: After set-up I popped in my newly acquired Terminator 3 dvd and I must say, I was blown away. As I stated earlier, I have a non-hdtv Sony 36"television and I have it set up with component cables. I was amazed at the clarity, and the fine details I could pick up with the progressive scan, versus my 4 year old Toshiba dvd player.

Sound Quality: As was stated in another review, the subwoofer is NOT powered, but passive. I am big on BASS so I was a little aprehensive at purchase time about this. I can tell you that I am very happy with the bass that this little unit puts out. The satellites do a great job also. No distortion, even at a fairly high volume(higher than normal listening). The unit itself plays in just about every format available right now, so there should be no conflict in that area. I also have the system set up to my satellite t.v. and the different effects you can create though the dolby processor(Matrix/Music/Cinema) really enhances even the most seemingly mundane program to bring out more sounds than you have heard before.

I am not a qualified audiophyle or videophyle, but I do know what I like, and I can tell you that this little puppy is worth way more than the $235 I paid. Why are you still reading this! BUY NOW!!

pros: Great sound/Great picture/AWESOME PRICE(don't forget, most places would charge you $30+ dollars to ship this 44 lb. box to you)

cons: No way to dim or switch off front display on unit during playback which is distracting in a darkened theater type environment.
I don't know who tied the speaker wires together, but they should be fired. It took me 10 of the 20 total minutes just to untie the darn things ;-)

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good for DVD movies, November 24, 2003
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
My first impresion was that the amplifier/receiver unit is very well built; it is heavy and has the kind of design that you get for an expensive system. The speakers do not look as elegant but not disappointing. But the subwoofer begs for a major improvement for its aesthetic appearance; it looked just big and unpolished.

For movies and pop music, it offers excellent sound from the speakers. Again, the subwoofer did not quite meet my expectation. It lacks the punch as it's not a powered unit. The low frequency sound was loud but loose. I heard much 'mumbling' but not enough 'boom'.

For classical music, it'a a mixed bag. Solo instrument performance such as the violin, cello or piano, sounds good. But for symphonic works, the system simply can not handle the complex mixture of sound. My feeling is that there is not enough 'bandwidth' to accommodate the sound.

Picture quality is great. The only problems were with SVCD at the last few minutes on the disc. Perhaps the laser can not pick up overburnt region.

Overall, I would say the system is worth the money, $250. You get a lot of functions for this compact system.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good for DVD, but poor for music, November 15, 2003
By 
SMO (Washington, DC USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
This system is definitely a good value for those wanting to add home theater in a small room. It is worth keeping in mind that this system doesn't have as much power as higher-priced systems, and the speakers and remote are made of a somewhat cheap-looking plastic. That said, it does a great job of filling the living room of my one-bedroom apartment.

Where this system falls short I think is in its ability to handle music on audio CDs. For some reason, no matter which settings I try (regular stereo or tweaking it with Dolby Pro Logic) audio CDs sound flat and lackluster. The problem seems to be that the included front speakers are very small and don't do a good job handling the mid-ranges common in rock music. The subwoofer tends to dominate and creates a muddy effect. I plan to replace the front speakers with a better set, but this is slightly complicated by the non-standard connectors on the back of this system (a plug instead of the usual "pinchers").

The DVD player is first-rate. The picture quality is outstanding and I particularly like the quality of the picture when scanning (fast-forwarding) -- something which a lot of DVD players don't do well. Set up and operation are also a real breeze. This system is much easier to use than some others that I've tried.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars "PROTECTION" PROBLEM, June 19, 2005
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
The bottom line is "this is a piece of junk." Last night my wife and I watched a movie, but this morning, the machine will not work. After you power up, a word flashes across the display that says "protection." This is not covered in the owner's manual nor will Toshiba help you. My machine did not even make it two years. Toshiba should be ashamed of themselves for selling such junk. I should have stuck with Sony products. I will never buy another Toshiba prodect again. The cost to get it repaired is almost as much as a new system. D0 NOT BUY THIS SYSTEM. I'm inclined to say don't buy any Toshiba product because of their poor customer service. Never again.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars a falling TOSHIBA, November 26, 2005
By 
M. K. (Chino Hills, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Toshiba SD-43HT Progressive-Scan DVD Home Theater System (Electronics)
I should have read these customer complaints before purchase the Toshiba SD-43HT about a year ago. I'm now end up with "Hello...Protection...Good-Bye" Club. This "Protection" problem keeps DVD automatically shut off every time you try to turn it on.

The bottom line is don't waste your hard earned money on a company who does not care about their reputations.
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