Yamaha DVDC750 5 Disc DVD-Video/SA-CD Changer

Yamaha DVDC750 5 Disc DVD-Video/SA-CD Changer

Our Price - $249.99

1 New - from $299.00

Availability - Currently Unavailable

 

Yamaha DVDC750 5 Disc DVD-Video/SA-CD Changer

Yamaha has endeavored to produce products and services that satisfy the diverse needs and desires of people worldwide. Its products and services are recognized the world over for superior quality in acoustics, design, technology, craftsmanship, and customer oriented services. These products and services under the brand name of Yamaha are highly regarded by a large number of professionals, institutions, business people within the related industries, and consumers.PRODUCT FEATURES:NTSC/PAL Progressive Scan Video Output;DVD Audio/Video, SVCD, VCD, CD, CD-R/RW and MP3 Playback;108MHz/12-bit Video DACs for High Picture Quality;S-Video Output;Video Picture Mode;192kHz/24-Bit D/A Conversion for High Quality Sound;Optical and Coaxial Digital Outputs;SA-CD and DVD Audio Playback Compatibility;CD Upsampling (2x and 4x);On-Screen Display;Multiple Zoom Functions.

 

The Yamaha DVDC750 5-disc DVD Video/SACD Changer delivers a host of options with multifaceted convenience. It plays DVD-Video, DVD-Audio, CDs, and SA-CDs, as well as CD-RW/Rs, DVD+RW/Rs, DVD-RW/Rs and MP3s. It also plays DivX-formatted movies that you burn to discs--allowing you to burn up to 5 full movies on recordable DVD and CD media. The changer shuffles effortlessly and promptly between discs to reduce annoying lag time. The PlayXchange system allows you to swap out four discs while the fifth disc keeps on playing without interruption. The Resume Playback feature allows you to stop watching a movie midway through, even turn the power off and then put the movie back in and start again at the spot you left off.

With its high-resolution filter the 10-bit video D/A converter delivers faster video signal processing for enhanced picture quality, minimizing digital artifacts. It also offers 24-bit/96kHz PCM audio compatibility for excellent audio playback. It also offers CD upsampling playback (to 2x and 4x) to give you the best-possible sound quality from your standard audio CDs.

SACD media offers super high-fidelity sound. Depending on the disc, the SACD format provides multichannel and/or stereo sound, often presented in a dual-layer format compatible with both standard CD players (at standard resolution) and SACD-equipped players like the DV-6771SL (for full-resolution playback). Audio enhancements consist of an audio-direct switch and CD upsampling playback (to an incredible 1,764 kHz) to give you the best-possible sound quality from your standard audio CDs. It includes component, composite, and S-Video outputs as well as digital optical and coaxial audio outputs.

 

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Yamaha DVDC750 5 Disc DVD-Video/SA-CD Changer Reviews

Have not found a true multi channel recorded music with the superb 110 db. SN yet and like to hear from anyone who has. I strongly advise checking the very limited available SA-CD's and their high expense before buying SA-CD player, most of the music on available SA-CD's were mastered years ago when the best SN on master tape was 96db(1980) or even worse about 80db in 70's so the SA-CD would produce as good as master(garbage in/garbage out)and there is no indication of the year the original recording was made on most SA-CD flyers which make it harder to choose what you buy. Yamaha player functions fine except the poor choice of color for it's hard to see display specialy hard to notice the small LED turning green. from orange indicating the played disc number.

 

Yamahalike SonyUSED to be a good brand name that deserved some respect. I've suffered through this player for almost a year; it's getting noticeably worse as the time drags on. Both companies now seem to churn out Communist Chinese GARBAGE that barely functions. Total Jucking Funk. Brand new discs without visible flaws won't play without lock-ups; I'm sick of this player and can hardly wait to get a different one. My biggest concern is getting one that's actually BETTER. I'm scared they're all this bad.

 

I found the performance and control options of this DVD changer to be superb, but I've owned it for little over a month and have had in in for service three times. I would hope there are better alternatives available, but haven't found one yet. The problem is that the tray holding the DVDs is very shallow, and if the device is jarred the individual DVDs may slide around and jam the mechanism. In this case, I found, the machine can be "rebooted" by unplugging it for a half-hour. Even without jarring, the device sometimes jams when trying to load (read) one of the DVDs, and becomes unresponsive to any of the control buttons or the remote.

 

Now you can play any kind of optical disc without thinking about it. For those titles which are currently only available on CD and possibly will never be released on DVD-AUDIO and/or SACD, this option converts standard CDs to the quality of DVD-AUDIO. Sometimes, it can be the other way around, except the European editions might be four percent faster and sharper and have less bonus material than their original North American counterparts. On both ends of the spectrum, if the audio pitch is corrected without changing the audio speed to keep the picture and sound in synch, a subaudible breaking-up effect may be noticed as the result of slight artifacts from slightly bending or stretching the pitch in the conversion process. This is not to be confused with 'Hybrid' type SACDs, which many, including the Yamaha DVDC750 will support. On the Musical Theatre, Opera, and choral side of things, this player is capable of playing both NTSC (North American) and PAL (European) DVDs on corresponding as well as opposite TVs.

*Others have reported problems playing 'Dual Discs'a type of disc which includes DVD-VIDEO on one side or layer, and CD DIGITAL AUDIO on another, also known as 'Hybrids.' However, big names, such as Panasonic, Sony, and Pioneer, do not recommend using these discs in their players. One thing that sets this player apart from the other manufacturers' players is Yamaha's CD UpSampling feature. If Yamaha could do a minor revision to the firmware which engages that same menu bipass as when repeating a single DVD, the machine would change DVDs automatically. Wait for the 'Region 0' message to disappear. However, because of this player's bicompatibility with both color systems, I have the freedom to choose and purchase whatever editions are the best. For certain titles in these genres, the North American editions are either four percent slower in tempo and picture movement and flatter in pitch than the European editions due to the method of PAL-to-NTSC conversion used by the distributors of such DVDs, or do not include as many bonus features as their original European counterparts. Ever since I discovered this player in the summer of 2005, I have been highly impressed with how much it met both my normal and oddball demands.

Close the tray. I discovered this by reauthoring DVDs without any of their menus using DVD Shrink Version 3.2.

Make sure there are no discs loaded. The only little flaw with this player's firmware is that when the 'All Discs' repeat mode is selected, when playing DVDs, after playing through all the titles, instead of moving on to the next disc, it returns to the home menu.

With the tray open, using its supplied remote control, slowly press 99990. Although it is not in the manual, this player can be made multi-region compatible including RCE DVDs.

Turn on the DVD player. As a student of Musical Theatre, Opera, Classical vocal and choral literature, and Jazz and Classical piano, DVD-AUDIO and SACD capabilities are of great importance to me because there are a lot of titles especially in the Classical genre available in these formats.

In conclusion, if you are looking for a DVD player with one hundred percent compatibility all across the board, you have come to the right place.* In fact, I currently use one of these in my bedroom, and by the spring or summer of 2006, I plan on either going the separate component route and getting another one for my livingroom, or more than likely, getting its integrated home cinema counterpart, the Yamaha DVX-C700 because of how great Yamaha's DVD technology is.

 
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