Podcast #463: Oppo BDP-93 Blu-ray Player
Oppo has been around since 2004, about a year longer than the HT Guys. We’ve watched them go from a company that built high performance upconverting DVD players to one that builds high performance Blu Ray Players. Today we take a look at the latest in the Oppo lineage, the BDP-93. The player is all black with a brushed aluminum face. The fit and finish is first rate and looks great in our equipment stack. The BDP-93 has a MSRP of $499.99 and is available today.
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Today's Show:
News:
- LG says it will mass produce large OLED panels by 2013
- Blu-ray Players Could Sell For Under $40 This Year
- My Movies to Begin Testing TV Series Support March 1, 2011
- Hulu in danger of losing more content
Other:
- Pioneer Elite Plasma Flat-Panel Displays Licensed To Sharp Electronics
- Glasnost: Test if your ISP is shaping your traffic
Oppo BDP-93 Blu-ray Player
Oppo has been around since 2004, about a year longer than the HT Guys. We’ve watched them go from a company that built high performance upconverting DVD players to one that builds high performance Blu-ray Players. Today we take a look at the latest in the Oppo lineage, the BDP-93. The player is all black with a brushed aluminum face. The fit and finish is first rate and looks great in our equipment stack. The BDP-93 has a MSRP of $499.99 and is available today.
Features:
- Blu-ray 3D & Network Streaming
- Wireless N, eSATA & USB 2.0
- Dual HDMI, IR & RS232 Control
- 2nd Generation Qdeo Video Processing
- SACD & DVD-Audio/Video
Setup:
The BDP-93 is just as easy to setup as any other Blu Ray player. Oppo has included a setup wizard to make the task easy. The wizard asks you six questions about how your player is connected, what resolution you want to output, aspect ratio, and so on. When that done you are ready to go for basic playback. If you want advanced features like streaming video you will need to go into the setup menus.
Getting the unit onto the Internet is easy and the people at Oppo have given you two options, wired and WiFi. If you go the WiFi route you will need to connect the included wireless N dongle.
Oppo has added an additional HDMI output to the BDP-93 so that if you want to enjoy 3D and next generation audio with your non-3D compliant receiver, you can route one of the outputs to the TV and the other to your receiver.
Oppo includes options for custom installers as well. There is an IR in port on the back of the unit so that you can install the player in an out of the way area and still use it with an IR remote control. There is also an RS-232 control port so that the player can be integrated into a home automation environment.
Performance:
We expected a lot out of this player because of its name and price. With Blu Ray players in the $150 range that give you BD-Live and Netflix Streaming why would you pay $300 more for this player. Well that’s simple. because its some of the best video we have seen on our displays! If you are into quality video you may want to consider this player.
The key to the high performance is the Marvell Kyoto-G2 video processor with the second generation Qdeo™ technology. We saw a demo of their first generation technology at CES in 2008 and were impressed with what it did to content on an iPod. Adding this processing to Blu Ray made for some incredible images on our displays. For your DVDs, the Oppo performs Per-pixel motion-adaptive de-interlacing and advanced scaling to upconvert the source. Then the Kyoto-G2 applies its technology to create some of the best upconverted content we have seen in a Blu Ray player.
We watched all movies at 24 frames per second. The unit does an excellent job of reproducing a theater like experience at that frame rate. However, you do need a display/projector that can accept a 24 fps signal. Most newer LCDs and plasmas will.
You’ll be surprised by what blew us away. We watched a few scenes of the Rocky Horror picture show. Ara had seen that movie dozens of times in the 80’s (at his girlfriend’s insistence of course) and he couldn’t remember it being so vivid. The colors were incredible and so clear. We kept looking for things that couldn’t have been detected in the original film. Speaking of color, the BDP-93 has custom picture adjustment section. When Ara had his projector calibrated by Ray Coronado, he went into the picture adjustment section on Ara’s BDP-83 to make sure that the player was at its best. If you are not using a professional calibrator we recommend leaving the player in the default settings.
In general, we found the Oppo did well with everything we threw at it. Of course a player like this really shines when its mated with a large HDTV. Because of the price we recommend that you should consider this TV if you have a 50 inch or larger display. The benefits on smaller displays are hard to distinguish.
DVD performance was equally impressive. While we won’t say that the DVDs were turned into high definition we will say the picture vastly improved. With that said, we still find that some DVDs upconvert better than others. More modern titles seem to look better than some older ones we have. The higher the quality of the transfer results in a higher quality upconversion. We figure the newer titles look better since they were mastered for Blu Ray and then downconverted for DVD.
Odds and Ends
- Streaming Video - The BDP-93 Blu Ray player supports Netflix Instant Streaming and Blockbust On Demand. Both interfaces are functional and the quality of the streams are similar to other devices. These are nice features if you don’t have a TV or a set top box with this functionality. Now we each have three ways to watch Netflix on the same TV!
- Audio - The Oppo supports Dolby® TrueHD, DTS-HD Master Audio™, 7.1-Channel Analog Output
- Media File Playback - The Oppo will playback media across your network with DLNA support as well as multimedia content off of Optical, USB, and e-SATA drives.
Conclusion:
There are a lot of Blu Ray players out there, many of which cost less, but if you want the highest quality picture with Blu Ray and Standard DVD, you only have one choice. The Oppo BDP-93!
Reader Comments (13)
One other cool thing that every review has pass by on is that the BD-93 supports NTFS on on attached storage. No more FAT32 required and the partition size limit etc. I think this is huge for attached storage to a device. I know of no other devices that supports it.
When looking into streaming problems, I've found that buffering culprits are usually one of two problems. The first is something else on your network downloading tons of data. It might not be another PC. It could be your smartphone or something else (and if you run a wide open wireless network, check to see who's connected).
The second problem is with DNS. The streaming services use your DNS server to attempt to route the traffic to you in the fewest amount of hops possible. The big guys like Netflix actually place content servers as close to the big ISP networks as possible. However, if you're ISP DNS is set up to show that you aren't in the area you really are, the video could be taking a very inefficient route to you. If you are just accepting the default DNS from your ISP experiment with using other ones. OpenDNS usually is pretty good, and you might also be able to find a local DNS server for your ISP.
The DUNE player supports NTFS on attached storage
Boy, I was just about ready to purchase the Oppo 93. When I was looking around, I saw something about a new model Oppo 95 for twice as much allowance money.
Can someone easily explain the benefit of purchasing the 95 model versus the older 93? What are some of the big advantages for getting the 95? Etc. Etc.
I have looked at the specs at Oppo's website, but it sure wass loaded with lots of new terms I'm not familar with.
Thanks
The Oppo 95 is directed at audiophile customers. The only differences are the high end analog outputs. If you're not an audiophile or use HDMI for sound just go with the 93.
Since I like quality in anything I do or buy, this means I could be close to being an audiophile. Currently I have the fairly new Bose Lifestyle 35 system. So, this alone means I should go ahead with the Oppo 95 BluRay Player.
Hurin, thanks for the details.
Wes,
If you have a Bose audio system, go with the Oppo 93. While Bose delivers nice sound around the house, you will never be able to hear the difference between the analog outputs on the 93 compared to the 95.
Bose is some of the worst equipment in existence. It is so horribly bad there are hate pages about it on the net. Like this one intellexual.net/bose.html
Saying that owning some microscopic absurdly overpriced speakers makes you ' close to being an audiophile', is like saying a gerbil is close to being a horse.
I am an audiophile and I have a pair of Vienna Acoustic Mahler to prove it. I just have to Oppo 80 as I use HDMI for sound.
It is deeply ironic someone would couple an Oppo with Bose, as Oppo use no money on advertising instead relying on word of mouth, At Bose advertising is nearly their entire budget.
Oh, boy! Conflicting feelings regarding equipment compatibility. I'm located in rural Oklahoma so I do not have access to high quality audio stores without driving 200+ miles to the Dallas area. When I have visitors over they are amazed with the sound they hear from the Bose system. The Vienna system mentioned is one I've never heard about.
Still investigating all the possibilities.
I have an oppo bd 83 and i'm ready to upgrade to bd-93. i have a receiver with the hdmi 1.3 only. can i connect the oppo bd-93 to an hdmi 1.3 or do i need to upgarade my receiver?
Hi Ray,
You can connect your receiver to the 93. You won't get 3D but you get all the HDMI 1.3 features.
Ara
does bdp-93 supports any 3d tv brands?
You do not have to have a 3d receiver with the Oppo 93. Thus the two hdmi ports. One goes to the receiver (say a 1.3 type) the other can be run to your 3d television. Now you will be able to broadcast content in 3d without upgrading the receiver. Coolio stuff.