I have owned every model of the sony mega-disc changer from the frist 200 disc model all through the 400 disc Blu-ray monster and a lot of the problems that I heard people talk about I believe or caused by not understand how to fully use their equipment no.1 tthese guys don't operate with the speed of a computer hard drive so you have to remember that these machines have a mech. Turntable that has to cycle to work correctly so getting frustrated at the speed that it turns can sometime cause a little impatience an u may want to keep pushing buttons to hurry it along which can cause it to go into the dreaded 13:00 instead let it stop an then just enter what ever disc no.
. A disc recorded in a color system other than NTSC, such as PAL or SECAM (this player conforms to the NTSC color system). A disc that has a non-standard shape (e.g., card, heart). A disc with paper or stickers on it. A disc that has the adhesive of cellophane tape or a sticker still left on it. A uniquely curated, carefully authenticated and ever-changing assortment of uncommon art, jewelry, fashion accessories, collectibles, antiques & more. Find unreal value with everything starting at $1.
I have owned every model of the sony mega-disc changer from the frist 200 disc model all through the 400 disc Blu-ray monster and a lot of the problems that I heard people talk about I believe or caused by not understand how to fully use their equipment no.1 tthese guys don't operate with the speed of a computer hard drive so you have to remember that these machines have a mech. Turntable that has to cycle to work correctly so getting frustrated at the speed that it turns can sometime cause a little impatience an u may want to keep pushing buttons to hurry it along which can cause it to go into the dreaded 13:00 instead let it stop an then just enter what ever disc no. Weakness:Here is where the fun starts. Couple issues:I knew from reading previous reviews, the labelling of the disks was going to be a pain.
And since I did not have the projector right away (had the entire system minus the projector for 2 weeks), I wanted to be able to load the disk player and listen to audio disks - get familiar with the unit.1) My number 1 gripe was being able to access a disk directly using the remote. For instance, if I am listening to disk 50 and what to go to disk 200, there are 3 ways of doing this a) stand up off the couch, walk over to the unit and use the shuffle dial to select that disk, b) hit the disk skip button on the remote 150 times!, c) turn on your projector, hit the 'folder' button on the remote and scroll down the list and play disk 200. I find this a real pain in the arse, as I had no video on the system, didnt want to get up (not very effective routine anyways) or hit a button 150 times. I would like to be able to type '200' into the remote and press play. The unit does not support this feature!
Confirmed by Sony Tech support engineers!2) disk lableling. This is just a retarded system.
The unit only auto labels sony disks. Out of 300 or so disks I initially loaded, that maybe is 20 in my collection.
These guys should provide a network jack on the unit so as I can plug it into the internet and the device looks up the cd info must like xp media player or winamp or musicmatch juke box. I would rather answer a couple questions that way versus having to type in all the disk info!3) to label the disks you MUST have a keyboard. Took me about 4 hours from strat to finish to fully label the disks. And I type fast! To label by the remote will take a month. I would strongly recommend you not labeling at all if you do not have a keyboard connected (ps2 only keyboard). Because.4) when you 'unload or eject' a disk, the system forgets all programmed name and album info for the disk - forever - till you type it in again.
So much for wanting to pinch a disk out of there so I can listen to it in the car for the day! I actully have a excel spreadsheet printed out on my coffee table with all the info as to who is in what slot in the player.
This is the best way I find so far of keeping track of whats going on. (sorted by artist name for 1 list, slot number for another)5) Unit is s-l-o-w. Playing disks with shuffle is uncomfortable.
The disk spins down, the pickup then gets the disk and puts it back into the carosel, it spins to next disk, picks up the disk, loads, spins, reads the info then plays. And.6) sometimes to shuffle 20 disks for example, the carosel spins 1/2 way one way then back then entire distance. Like its lost! Strange.7) sacd - cant use hdmi to listen to them. Copyright protection or something like that.
Had to purchase patch cables and connect. Still does not work properly. Only front left and right speakers work. Gave up on the routine. Too much work for all of 3 sacds I have.8) Device is slow during play of disks.
As mentioned in other reviews, this device DOES autoplay when powered on. I dont like it either. So you power on the player and stand there with remote in hand for 30 secs or so waiting for the unit to respond to input in order to hit stop. (while the rig is moving disks etc, it is unresponsive to most remote inputs)9) onscreen disk catalouge. By default it shows album name then artist. You can change the order, but it pops back.
I have a cd rack sorted by artist not by album. I cant beleive it does this. Perhaps I am missing something in the config of the unit.10) I have a few disks with do not play. Player displays 'CANNOT PLAY' in display and skips to next disk. Looking at the disk, it has some enhanced content which you can use your computer to view.
Too bad - I really like 1 of those disks. Weakness:Here is where the fun starts.
Couple issues:I knew from reading previous reviews, the labelling of the disks was going to be a pain. And since I did not have the projector right away (had the entire system minus the projector for 2 weeks), I wanted to be able to load the disk player and listen to audio disks - get familiar with the unit.1) My number 1 gripe was being able to access a disk directly using the remote. For instance, if I am listening to disk 50 and what to go to disk 200, there are 3 ways of doing this a) stand up off the couch, walk over to the unit and use the shuffle dial to select that disk, b) hit the disk skip button on the remote 150 times!, c) turn on your projector, hit the 'folder' button on the remote and scroll down the list and play disk 200. I find this a real pain in the arse, as I had no video on the system, didnt want to get up (not very effective routine anyways) or hit a button 150 times. I would like to be able to type '200' into the remote and press play. The unit does not support this feature!
Confirmed by Sony Tech support engineers!2) disk lableling. This is just a retarded system.
The unit only auto labels sony disks. Out of 300 or so disks I initially loaded, that maybe is 20 in my collection. These guys should provide a network jack on the unit so as I can plug it into the internet and the device looks up the cd info must like xp media player or winamp or musicmatch juke box. I would rather answer a couple questions that way versus having to type in all the disk info!3) to label the disks you MUST have a keyboard. Took me about 4 hours from strat to finish to fully label the disks. And I type fast!
To label by the remote will take a month. I would strongly recommend you not labeling at all if you do not have a keyboard connected (ps2 only keyboard). Because.4) when you 'unload or eject' a disk, the system forgets all programmed name and album info for the disk - forever - till you type it in again.
So much for wanting to pinch a disk out of there so I can listen to it in the car for the day! I actully have a excel spreadsheet printed out on my coffee table with all the info as to who is in what slot in the player. This is the best way I find so far of keeping track of whats going on. (sorted by artist name for 1 list, slot number for another)5) Unit is s-l-o-w. Playing disks with shuffle is uncomfortable. The disk spins down, the pickup then gets the disk and puts it back into the carosel, it spins to next disk, picks up the disk, loads, spins, reads the info then plays.
And.6) sometimes to shuffle 20 disks for example, the carosel spins 1/2 way one way then back then entire distance. Like its lost! Strange.7) sacd - cant use hdmi to listen to them.
Copyright protection or something like that. Had to purchase patch cables and connect. Still does not work properly. Only front left and right speakers work. Gave up on the routine. Too much work for all of 3 sacds I have.8) Device is slow during play of disks. As mentioned in other reviews, this device DOES autoplay when powered on.
I dont like it either. So you power on the player and stand there with remote in hand for 30 secs or so waiting for the unit to respond to input in order to hit stop. (while the rig is moving disks etc, it is unresponsive to most remote inputs)9) onscreen disk catalouge. By default it shows album name then artist.
You can change the order, but it pops back. I have a cd rack sorted by artist not by album. I cant beleive it does this. Perhaps I am missing something in the config of the unit.10) I have a few disks with do not play. Player displays 'CANNOT PLAY' in display and skips to next disk.
Looking at the disk, it has some enhanced content which you can use your computer to view. Too bad - I really like 1 of those disks. Weakness:Here is where the fun starts. Couple issues:I knew from reading previous reviews, the labelling of the disks was going to be a pain. And since I did not have the projector right away (had the entire system minus the projector for 2 weeks), I wanted to be able to load the disk player and listen to audio disks - get familiar with the unit.1) My number 1 gripe was being able to access a disk directly using the remote.
For instance, if I am listening to disk 50 and what to go to disk 200, there are 3 ways of doing this a) stand up off the couch, walk over to the unit and use the shuffle dial to select that disk, b) hit the disk skip button on the remote 150 times!, c) turn on your projector, hit the 'folder' button on the remote and scroll down the list and play disk 200. I find this a real pain in the arse, as I had no video on the system, didnt want to get up (not very effective routine anyways) or hit a button 150 times. I would like to be able to type '200' into the remote and press play. The unit does not support this feature! Confirmed by Sony Tech support engineers!2) disk lableling.
This is just a retarded system. The unit only auto labels sony disks. Out of 300 or so disks I initially loaded, that maybe is 20 in my collection. These guys should provide a network jack on the unit so as I can plug it into the internet and the device looks up the cd info must like xp media player or winamp or musicmatch juke box. I would rather answer a couple questions that way versus having to type in all the disk info!3) to label the disks you MUST have a keyboard. Took me about 4 hours from strat to finish to fully label the disks.
And I type fast! To label by the remote will take a month. I would strongly recommend you not labeling at all if you do not have a keyboard connected (ps2 only keyboard). Because.4) when you 'unload or eject' a disk, the system forgets all programmed name and album info for the disk - forever - till you type it in again. So much for wanting to pinch a disk out of there so I can listen to it in the car for the day! I actully have a excel spreadsheet printed out on my coffee table with all the info as to who is in what slot in the player.
This is the best way I find so far of keeping track of whats going on. (sorted by artist name for 1 list, slot number for another)5) Unit is s-l-o-w. Playing disks with shuffle is uncomfortable. The disk spins down, the pickup then gets the disk and puts it back into the carosel, it spins to next disk, picks up the disk, loads, spins, reads the info then plays. And.6) sometimes to shuffle 20 disks for example, the carosel spins 1/2 way one way then back then entire distance. Like its lost!
Strange.7) sacd - cant use hdmi to listen to them. Copyright protection or something like that. Had to purchase patch cables and connect.
Still does not work properly. Only front left and right speakers work. Gave up on the routine. Too much work for all of 3 sacds I have.8) Device is slow during play of disks.
As mentioned in other reviews, this device DOES autoplay when powered on. I dont like it either. So you power on the player and stand there with remote in hand for 30 secs or so waiting for the unit to respond to input in order to hit stop. (while the rig is moving disks etc, it is unresponsive to most remote inputs)9) onscreen disk catalouge. By default it shows album name then artist.
You can change the order, but it pops back. I have a cd rack sorted by artist not by album. I cant beleive it does this. Perhaps I am missing something in the config of the unit.10) I have a few disks with do not play. Player displays 'CANNOT PLAY' in display and skips to next disk.
Looking at the disk, it has some enhanced content which you can use your computer to view. Too bad - I really like 1 of those disks. Just finished reno'ing my basement.
Full blown theatre with 135 inch projection HD 1080p/i Panasonic. Denon reciever with 3 hdmi inputs and 1 hdmi output. Everything is 1080p/i. I researched long and hard on this disk player as I have spent considerable time and money on the remainder of the system.
Wanted to take full advantage of the entire system. Was real close to not buying the unit, but the 400 disks loaded at one time is hard to resist!Read on but let me say right now, if I had to do it again knowing what I know now, I still would purchase the unit.
I would however, like to see sony read this and update the hardware for next years release! Weakness:Here is where the fun starts. Couple issues:I knew from reading previous reviews, the labelling of the disks was going to be a pain. And since I did not have the projector right away (had the entire system minus the projector for 2 weeks), I wanted to be able to load the disk player and listen to audio disks - get familiar with the unit.1) My number 1 gripe was being able to access a disk directly using the remote. For instance, if I am listening to disk 50 and what to go to disk 200, there are 3 ways of doing this a) stand up off the couch, walk over to the unit and use the shuffle dial to select that disk, b) hit the disk skip button on the remote 150 times!, c) turn on your projector, hit the 'folder' button on the remote and scroll down the list and play disk 200.
I find this a real pain in the arse, as I had no video on the system, didnt want to get up (not very effective routine anyways) or hit a button 150 times. I would like to be able to type '200' into the remote and press play. The unit does not support this feature! Confirmed by Sony Tech support engineers!2) disk lableling. This is just a retarded system.
The unit only auto labels sony disks. Out of 300 or so disks I initially loaded, that maybe is 20 in my collection. These guys should provide a network jack on the unit so as I can plug it into the internet and the device looks up the cd info must like xp media player or winamp or musicmatch juke box. I would rather answer a couple questions that way versus having to type in all the disk info!3) to label the disks you MUST have a keyboard. Took me about 4 hours from strat to finish to fully label the disks. And I type fast!
To label by the remote will take a month. I would strongly recommend you not labeling at all if you do not have a keyboard connected (ps2 only keyboard). Because.4) when you 'unload or eject' a disk, the system forgets all programmed name and album info for the disk - forever - till you type it in again. So much for wanting to pinch a disk out of there so I can listen to it in the car for the day!
I actully have a excel spreadsheet printed out on my coffee table with all the info as to who is in what slot in the player. This is the best way I find so far of keeping track of whats going on. (sorted by artist name for 1 list, slot number for another)5) Unit is s-l-o-w. Playing disks with shuffle is uncomfortable. The disk spins down, the pickup then gets the disk and puts it back into the carosel, it spins to next disk, picks up the disk, loads, spins, reads the info then plays.
And.6) sometimes to shuffle 20 disks for example, the carosel spins 1/2 way one way then back then entire distance. Like its lost! Strange.7) sacd - cant use hdmi to listen to them. Copyright protection or something like that.
Had to purchase patch cables and connect. Still does not work properly. Only front left and right speakers work. Gave up on the routine. Too much work for all of 3 sacds I have.8) Device is slow during play of disks.
As mentioned in other reviews, this device DOES autoplay when powered on. I dont like it either. So you power on the player and stand there with remote in hand for 30 secs or so waiting for the unit to respond to input in order to hit stop. (while the rig is moving disks etc, it is unresponsive to most remote inputs)9) onscreen disk catalouge.
By default it shows album name then artist. You can change the order, but it pops back. I have a cd rack sorted by artist not by album.
I cant beleive it does this. Perhaps I am missing something in the config of the unit.10) I have a few disks with do not play. Player displays 'CANNOT PLAY' in display and skips to next disk. Looking at the disk, it has some enhanced content which you can use your computer to view. Too bad - I really like 1 of those disks.
Just finished reno'ing my basement. Full blown theatre with 135 inch projection HD 1080p/i Panasonic. Denon reciever with 3 hdmi inputs and 1 hdmi output. Everything is 1080p/i. I researched long and hard on this disk player as I have spent considerable time and money on the remainder of the system. Wanted to take full advantage of the entire system. Was real close to not buying the unit, but the 400 disks loaded at one time is hard to resist!Read on but let me say right now, if I had to do it again knowing what I know now, I still would purchase the unit.
I would however, like to see sony read this and update the hardware for next years release! Weakness:There are two problems I am experiencing with the DVP-CX995V:- SACD playback.For reasons unknown, I experience random audio dropouts when listening to SACDs. I have over 30 titles, all of which are brand new, with no scratches/dust/fingerprints. The DVP-CX995V is installed on an isolation platform (using four isolation bearings for vibration dampening), is supplied with clean power (as is all of the other AV equipment), and is connected to my preamplifier using two high quality DH Labs analog interconnect cables with locking RCA connectors. I have tried cleaning the lens of the DVP-CX995V several times, but I still get random audio dropouts regardless of which SACD title I play.I have never experienced any problems with digital audio from the player.Also, I can't get SACD surround sound, as the analog inputs on my preamplifier are two channel (stereo) only. (5.1 surround output needs six inputs).I really wish Sony would get their act together and make digital output standard for all SACD playback.
Currently a few of the ES receivers have iLink inputs for digital SACD playback, and only a few ES models of single disc players have iLink output. Having to use analog audio connections between components is far from ideal, and vastly limits the potential of this audio format.- HDMI upscaling.The HDMI upscaling on my DVP-CX995V does not work, period.The reason why? Because it is connected to a Sony high definition screen (PFM-42X1/B) using HDMI output from the player into a DVI input on the display.
The player recognizes an HDMI connection, but will only output 640p. Even the Disk Explorer menu is displayed as 4:3 on a 16:9 screen (automatically switching between 16:9 and 4:3 for DVD movie playback does work).Calling Sony support didn't provide a solution.The thing that really worries me is that Sony are moving towards HDMI output on all of their consumer video products, and it is highly likely that they won't work with DVI either. I purchased the Sony DVP-CX995V to replace our older DVP-CX985V. For us, the main differences between the two were the reasons for upgrading to the newer model; digital HDMI video output with upscaling of DVD movies to high-definition, the new version of Sony's Disc Explorer, and 192kHz/24-bit audio D/A converter (the same specification as the DVP-CX777ES model) for SACD playback.The new Disc Explorer is faster, mainly because it does not display the jacket cover pictures for each disc in the main menu as did the previous versions. Other than that the two players are fairly similar.Video and digital audio quality is very good (I'm using an HDMI-DVI cable for the video and a high quality DH Labs D-75 coaxial cable for the digital audio). The player also plays back JPEG pictures and MP3 audio (burnt onto CD-R discs in this case). MP3 audio is output as 44.1 kHz PCM.
The DVP-CX995V does not have any external control ports (such as Sony Control S or Control A1II).A few general points to note about previous and current Sony DVD/SACD changers:- SACD (Super Audio Compact Disc) playback is analog output only.- DVD-audio discs cannot be played.This model, like most others, cannot play the second side of a dual-sided DVD disc (the only model which did this was the now discontinued DVP-CX875P).The majority of DVD video discs do not have title information (which is displayed in the Disc Explorer menu). For this you will have to type in the information by attaching a keyboard to the player.
This can be tedious if you have a large number of DVD movies, but it works very well. I have never experienced loosing the title information which I have entered.All of the SACD discs we own already have title information on the disc.
For discs which do contain title information, the text cannot be edited.Actually, out of the four Sony DVD magachangers we have owned, I by far preferred the design of the DVP-CX875P to the other models. Weakness:There are two problems I am experiencing with the DVP-CX995V:- SACD playback.For reasons unknown, I experience random audio dropouts when listening to SACDs. I have over 30 titles, all of which are brand new, with no scratches/dust/fingerprints. The DVP-CX995V is installed on an isolation platform (using four isolation bearings for vibration dampening), is supplied with clean power (as is all of the other AV equipment), and is connected to my preamplifier using two high quality DH Labs analog interconnect cables with locking RCA connectors. I have tried cleaning the lens of the DVP-CX995V several times, but I still get random audio dropouts regardless of which SACD title I play.I have never experienced any problems with digital audio from the player.Also, I can't get SACD surround sound, as the analog inputs on my preamplifier are two channel (stereo) only.
(5.1 surround output needs six inputs).I really wish Sony would get their act together and make digital output standard for all SACD playback. Currently a few of the ES receivers have iLink inputs for digital SACD playback, and only a few ES models of single disc players have iLink output. Having to use analog audio connections between components is far from ideal, and vastly limits the potential of this audio format.- HDMI upscaling.The HDMI upscaling on my DVP-CX995V does not work, period.The reason why? Because it is connected to a Sony high definition screen (PFM-42X1/B) using HDMI output from the player into a DVI input on the display. The player recognizes an HDMI connection, but will only output 640p. Even the Disk Explorer menu is displayed as 4:3 on a 16:9 screen (automatically switching between 16:9 and 4:3 for DVD movie playback does work).Calling Sony support didn't provide a solution.The thing that really worries me is that Sony are moving towards HDMI output on all of their consumer video products, and it is highly likely that they won't work with DVI either. I purchased the Sony DVP-CX995V to replace our older DVP-CX985V.
For us, the main differences between the two were the reasons for upgrading to the newer model; digital HDMI video output with upscaling of DVD movies to high-definition, the new version of Sony's Disc Explorer, and 192kHz/24-bit audio D/A converter (the same specification as the DVP-CX777ES model) for SACD playback.The new Disc Explorer is faster, mainly because it does not display the jacket cover pictures for each disc in the main menu as did the previous versions. Other than that the two players are fairly similar.Video and digital audio quality is very good (I'm using an HDMI-DVI cable for the video and a high quality DH Labs D-75 coaxial cable for the digital audio). The player also plays back JPEG pictures and MP3 audio (burnt onto CD-R discs in this case). MP3 audio is output as 44.1 kHz PCM. The DVP-CX995V does not have any external control ports (such as Sony Control S or Control A1II).A few general points to note about previous and current Sony DVD/SACD changers:- SACD (Super Audio Compact Disc) playback is analog output only.- DVD-audio discs cannot be played.This model, like most others, cannot play the second side of a dual-sided DVD disc (the only model which did this was the now discontinued DVP-CX875P).The majority of DVD video discs do not have title information (which is displayed in the Disc Explorer menu). For this you will have to type in the information by attaching a keyboard to the player. This can be tedious if you have a large number of DVD movies, but it works very well.
I have never experienced loosing the title information which I have entered.All of the SACD discs we own already have title information on the disc. For discs which do contain title information, the text cannot be edited.Actually, out of the four Sony DVD magachangers we have owned, I by far preferred the design of the DVP-CX875P to the other models. Having owned at least 8 different Sony players over the years, I have got to say considering the price paid, this unit is pretty swell. While there are is always the fear of the Navigator going mental, so far only a few titles have been lost to the ghost in the machine. Video wise, I think it looks quite good if not the equal of the Denon players.
Layer changes have improved considerably over prior Sony offerings. The Disc Navigator is way better than the previous generation megachanger. The player is quiet to boot.On the annoying side, the player always auto starts. I.e When the player is first powered, the player must load and start the last title viewed before you can go to the title you intend to watch.
Annoying but not fatal. Load time could be better but it is not as bad as I have heard others whine about.All in all, an insane amount of entertainment for a reasonable price. I purchased mine local given all of the potential problems intrinsic to megachanger. I figured just the shipping if warranty work was needed would offset the difference in price. C.C ships warranty work for free.
Having owned at least 8 different Sony players over the years, I have got to say considering the price paid, this unit is pretty swell. While there are is always the fear of the Navigator going mental, so far only a few titles have been lost to the ghost in the machine. Video wise, I think it looks quite good if not the equal of the Denon players. Layer changes have improved considerably over prior Sony offerings. The Disc Navigator is way better than the previous generation megachanger. The player is quiet to boot.On the annoying side, the player always auto starts.
I.e When the player is first powered, the player must load and start the last title viewed before you can go to the title you intend to watch. Annoying but not fatal. Load time could be better but it is not as bad as I have heard others whine about.All in all, an insane amount of entertainment for a reasonable price. I purchased mine local given all of the potential problems intrinsic to megachanger. I figured just the shipping if warranty work was needed would offset the difference in price. C.C ships warranty work for free. The Sony DVP-CX995V.
Let's get the obvious out of the way.Yes. It will play your movies, your CD's and MP3's. The picture and sound is more than acceptable.Yes.
It will hold a lot of discs in a relatively compact space and eliminate clutter in your A/V / Home Theater Room.Saying that, the product falls short of being truly usable its intended purpose. The interface is horrific.and that is coming from a confirmed gadget geek who loves to play with the latest electronic wonders. I am very disappointed that Sony would put a product like this on the market.Some of the simplest things you would expect of DVP-CX995V are missing.
For example, it would seem obvious that with 400 discs, there would be some quick and efficient method to select a disc such as keying in the disc slot from the keypad. You either manually turn the disc skip control on the unit, or repeatedly press the 'disc skip' on the remote while the player sequential spins the carousel (or repeatedly paging through screens of titles on a television).
Thankfully, on the player there is a button that allows you to skip 100 discs at a time so that you only have to manually go forward or backward, may be 50 slots. It is that primitive.The unit does not allow you to enter and save programs for favorite CD's. The closest you can do is to categorize the discs by artist, genre, etc and then select that group to play. This information needs to be keyed into the player. However, a disc (slot) can only be assigned to one category. This leads to the next item.The highly touted ability to enter and create a library of title information is flawed because the player loses its memory if it is without power for less than 24 hours.
I live in Florida.this is an issue. Even if you live in an area which has stable power, what if you want to move or unplug the unit? It boggles my mind that in an era when you can buy 128MB of non-volatile flash memory for less than $20, why does this unit have this problem?By the way, the DVP-CX995V is s-l-o-w to mount and read a disc. Forget about shuffle play of tracks between CD discs.I was disappointed to learn that this player will not read MP3's from DVD media like the other current Sony players do. Given the slowness of the unit, it would be nice to collapse 30 or 40 albums of music onto a single DVD but it is not there.Yes, the player forces you to wait 20-30 seconds upon startup while it loads and reads the information from the last disc played.whether you want to play it or not. This is such a simple bug.why doesn't Sony fix it.Yes. You will need to read the manual.
This must be the least intuitive machine I have ever used. 'Steep learning curve' would be an understatement.
After playing with it for over a week, I don't understand what Sony was thinking about when they designed the DVP-CS995V. It doesn't have to be this hard.Prior to buying this player, I read some of the negative reviews and thought they were written by the sort of person who gets confused setting up a VCR or using a remote control. Well, I was wrong. In fact, I don't understand the positive reviews that you will find listed.Bottom line. Unless you must have a player that can store 400 pieces of media, avoid the DVP-CX995V. Save your money and peace of mind. You will thank me.
Hear me now.believe me later. The Sony DVP-CX995V. Let's get the obvious out of the way.Yes. It will play your movies, your CD's and MP3's.
The picture and sound is more than acceptable.Yes. It will hold a lot of discs in a relatively compact space and eliminate clutter in your A/V / Home Theater Room.Saying that, the product falls short of being truly usable its intended purpose. The interface is horrific.and that is coming from a confirmed gadget geek who loves to play with the latest electronic wonders.
I am very disappointed that Sony would put a product like this on the market.Some of the simplest things you would expect of DVP-CX995V are missing. For example, it would seem obvious that with 400 discs, there would be some quick and efficient method to select a disc such as keying in the disc slot from the keypad. You either manually turn the disc skip control on the unit, or repeatedly press the 'disc skip' on the remote while the player sequential spins the carousel (or repeatedly paging through screens of titles on a television). Thankfully, on the player there is a button that allows you to skip 100 discs at a time so that you only have to manually go forward or backward, may be 50 slots. It is that primitive.The unit does not allow you to enter and save programs for favorite CD's. The closest you can do is to categorize the discs by artist, genre, etc and then select that group to play. This information needs to be keyed into the player.
However, a disc (slot) can only be assigned to one category. This leads to the next item.The highly touted ability to enter and create a library of title information is flawed because the player loses its memory if it is without power for less than 24 hours.
I live in Florida.this is an issue. Even if you live in an area which has stable power, what if you want to move or unplug the unit? It boggles my mind that in an era when you can buy 128MB of non-volatile flash memory for less than $20, why does this unit have this problem?By the way, the DVP-CX995V is s-l-o-w to mount and read a disc. Forget about shuffle play of tracks between CD discs.I was disappointed to learn that this player will not read MP3's from DVD media like the other current Sony players do. Given the slowness of the unit, it would be nice to collapse 30 or 40 albums of music onto a single DVD but it is not there.Yes, the player forces you to wait 20-30 seconds upon startup while it loads and reads the information from the last disc played.whether you want to play it or not.
This is such a simple bug.why doesn't Sony fix it.Yes. You will need to read the manual.
This must be the least intuitive machine I have ever used. 'Steep learning curve' would be an understatement. After playing with it for over a week, I don't understand what Sony was thinking about when they designed the DVP-CS995V. It doesn't have to be this hard.Prior to buying this player, I read some of the negative reviews and thought they were written by the sort of person who gets confused setting up a VCR or using a remote control. Well, I was wrong. In fact, I don't understand the positive reviews that you will find listed.Bottom line. Unless you must have a player that can store 400 pieces of media, avoid the DVP-CX995V.
Save your money and peace of mind. You will thank me. Hear me now.believe me later.
The changer's re-designed Disc Explorer on-screen graphic user interface provides intuitive access to the expansive disc library making it easy for users to locate their favorite movies and SA-CD music.' HDMI is the connection for the high definition age and we intend to outfit our products with the best high resolution solution available,' said Philip Abram, vice president of marketing for Sony Electronics' Home Audio and Home Video Division. 'Sony's DVD changers are extremely popular products and adding HDMI was the next logical step in the products' evolution.' With libraries of DVD movies, shows and concerts, music CDs and image CDs growing rapidly, the new changer is the perfect way for people to organize their entertainment life.
The product features Sony's Precision Cinema Progressive circuitry, Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1 channel outputs and compatibility with DVD-RW/-R/+RW/+R, MP3, JPEG, CD-RW/-R, VCD and SVCD playback. Additional user convenience features include multi-disc resume (40 discs), custom parental controls (400 discs) and playback memory (400 discs).
The player also offers coaxial and optical digital outputs and a universal remote control.The DVP-CX995V will be available this summer for about $400.Broad Performance-Driven Line UpThe 2005 line also includes two single-disc HDMI DVD players and two progressive models addressing multiple levels of performance and budget. All of the new DVD players feature Precision Cinema Progressive circuitry and 12bit/108MHz video D/A converter for high-quality video output.DVP-NS90V - The single-disc DVD/SA-CD player delivers high quality video and sound with HDMI output and 720p/1080i up-scaling. New to this year's DVD feature set is Fast/Slow Playback with Sound, which allows you to play video at fast forward or slow motion speed with recognizable audio playback and compatibility with long-playing DVD+R Double Layer.Additionally, the unit offers A/V Sync, which aligns audio and video playback and multiple format playback compatibility including DVD-RW/-R/+RW/+R, MP3, JPEG, CD-R/-RW, VCD, SVCD.
Other features include multi-disc resume memory (up to 40 discs), custom parental control (up to 40 discs), playback memory (up to 40 discs), coaxial and optical outputs and multi-brand TV and receiver remote control.The DVP-NS90V will be available this summer for about $200.DVP-NS70H -The single disc DVP-NS70H DVD player with HDMI offers the similar video features as the DVP-NS90V without SA-CD playback and Dolby Digital and DTS audio output. The unit does feature coaxial and optical digital outputs, TV virtual surrounds, video equalizer, Precision Cinema Progressive circuitry, picture navigation, Fast/Slow Playback with Sound and A/V Sync.
The DVP-NS70H will be available this summer for about $150.DVP-NC80V - The five-disc DVD/SA-CD changer DVP-NC80V features Precision Cinema Progressive technology and Precision Drive III for high quality video output. With Fast/Slow Playback With Sound, A/V Sync, Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1 output and coaxial and optical digital outputs, the unit also delivers flexible playback with DVD-RW/-R/+RW/+R, MP3, JPEG, CD-R/-RW, VCD, SVCD compatibility. The DVP-NC80V, which is available in black or silver, will ship this spring for about $140.DVP-NS50P - The value-packed DVP-NS50P delivers all of the same functions as the DVP-NS70V without the HDMI output or the 720p/1080i video upscaling. The unit also features Precision Cinema Progressive circuitry, 12bit/108MHz Video DAC and video equalizer for outstanding picture quality and Fast/Slow Playback with Sound. The player comes in silver and black finish and will be available this spring for about $80.