Share your experience!
Hello everybody
Does anybody know what the difference really is?.
Looking at the product page for BDP-S5200 reveals that it has support for Triluminous,
however the BDP-S4200 has not, but it has Deep Colour 16bit.
It seems BDP-S1200,3200,4200 and 5200 share the same datasheet
but it doesn't contain any references to Triluminous only Deep Colour.
Product page for 65W855A mentions Triluminous but the manual says nothing.
Should I buy BDP-S5200 that has Triluminous or would the BDP-S4200 be enough that
"only supports" 16-bit colour?.
Thanks
-Peter
Good point - very much depends on the quality of source material being played back as some differences may be quite subtle. Probably worth getting a demo instore if you can so you can see for yourself.
As an aside - how do you remember your username, I'm impressed!
Thanks Catmambo - usernames usually occupied so went frenzy on keyboard:smileywink:
Yes the differences might be subtle and I would probably not notice them
if watching a movie nicely mastered from the beginning.
I wrote and called the support regarding the differences about
[Triluminous] - [Deep colour] - [x.v. colour] tech support relays me to
sales dept and vice versa - a run-a-round-galore:smileyhappy:
Since Triluminous is mentioned for some Bluray players and others not -
there must be some special firmware or IC inside these players to exclusively
support Triluminous.
It seems all players support 10, 12 and 16bit Deep Colour which would mean 48bit
RGB colour - would there be any benefit of expanding beyond this by using
for example Triluminous?.
Then we have x.v. colour also to further complicate things.
Ok so a simple question:
Of the newly released players BDP-S1200, S3200, S4200, S5200, S6200, S7200 etc..
Which of these players contain what of Triluminous, Deep colour and x.v Colour?.
-Peter
Yes the website doesn't make clear on the colour options - let me check with the European Product Manager and I'll post back & let you know.
thanks