Home Theater Basics: Which DVD Player Should I Buy?
Buying a DVD Player by Alan LofftAll the Top DVD Players & Blu-Ray Players here
By comparison, the VCR seems almost crude: tape heads spin at 1,000 rpm against the surface of video tape as it spools from one reel to the other inside its cassette shell, causing gradual tape degradation. And when its rewound at high speed, the mechanical spooling action damages the tapes edge, which affects the picture stability.
Moreover, the VCR is intensely mechanical--virtually everyone has had a tape jam or seen a favorite tape "eaten" by a malfunctioning VCR as it ages.
DVD players have also come down in price very rapidly (VCRs took many years to reach affordable prices), so now you can find major brands (Sony, Toshiba, Panasonic, etc.) with excellent picture and sound quality for $300 or less. And because the video and audio information on a DVD is stored in digital form, differences in picture and sound quality between different brands have become very small. Even inexpensive players produce picture and sound thats a huge improvement over the best VCR.
How much better is a DVDs picture and sound? Its a bit of a mouthful, but picture sharpness and clarity is measured in "horizontal lines of resolution." A DVDs maximum is 540 lines, the sharpest picture available to consumers in the home other than High-Definition TV. (Dont confuse horizontal lines of resolution with our TV systems 525 scanning lines; all North American sets use 525 lines to "paint" the image across the screen.) Compared to DVD playback, a VCR produces horizontal resolution of 240 lines maximum, a TV picture thats fuzzy with bleeding or overlapping colors when you look at it next to a DVDs image. Live TV of a sports event or a studio talk show will yield 330 lines of resolution--better than a VCR but no match for a DVD player. And because a DVDs picture is stored digitally (and a VCRs is analogue), video noise--the grainy look to VCR images--is essentially absent from DVD playback.
In the sound department, stereo hi-fi sound from a VCR is really very good, but again its no match for six channels of Dolby Digital surround sound that virtually every modern movie release has on its soundtrack. The first thing to make sure of in a DVD player is that it will play back Dolby Digital 5.1-channel surround sound -- as well as dts surround, Dolbys competitor. Almost all DVD players will pass these multi-channel audio signals via a coaxial cable or a "Toslink" optical cable to your A/V surround sound receiver. Even if you havent got a surround sound unit yet, a DVD player will still deliver a stereo audio signal that you can feed to your stereo amplifier until you can afford to upgrade to a Dolby Digital surround receiver.
So what video features do you look for and what does more money buy in a DVD player? First, a short course in connections: Even the most basic DVD player (or VCR) will have a "composite-video" output (an RCA jack just like the jacks on your CD player), which will give you a very good picture on your TV. All TV sets except very old, basic models have a composite-video input. The next level up is called "S-Video." Its a single cable with a multi-pin connector that separates the color signal from the brightness signal. Your TV or receiver must have S-video inputs if you are to benefit from the significantly better picture that S-video connectors will deliver. S-video connectors have become quite common on even inexpensive DVD players and new TV sets.
Near the top of the scale are "component-video" connectors, a set of three RCA cables, usually color-coded red, green, and blue for each primary color signal that makes up the TV image. These will yield the absolute top picture quality, especially with large-screen TV sets of all types. However, your TV must have the same set of component-video inputs to benefit from the picture improvements.
At the very top are the most expensive DVD players with "progressive-scan wideband" component-video outputs. You must have a Hi-Def, HDTV-capable TV display with the same "wideband component-video inputs" in order to utilize these progressive-scan DVD images, which have no horizontal scanning lines and present a more film-like image.
Thats about it. All DVD players will do some kind of slow motion, fast scanning, and cueing to a particular "chapter" or scene in a movie, but its the aforementioned type of video outputs and connectors that have the biggest influence on picture quality and affect the players price. Still, you should check the remote control to see if the buttons are easily readable, especially in dim lighting, and well laid out for easy operation. Some remote's buttons are back-lighted, but those will be on more costly players. And when you rent your first DVD, dont forget to watch all the DVD "extras" you get these days--commentaries by the director and actors on the making of the movie; cast biographies, deleted scenes. Its fascinating stuff, and will provide you with no end of entertainment and diversion. Go DVD!