0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 7594 times.
There are or will be a couple units like that, except the one has multiple HDMI inputs.What type of amps will you be using?
I'm not sure you'll find such a box. I'm guessing the licensing fees for using all the new DD & DTS decoder variants guarantees that only the mass producers of home theater components can use them.Another option is a BluRay player like the Oppo BDP-103 that will decode all the new formats AND has analog outputs. Most new BD players don't have analog outputs, just HDMI and digital. Russ
What's the lowest cost Oppo model (current or discontinued) with TrueHD and 7.1 analog outputs?
...The discontinued BDP-93 and BDP-83 also have TrueHD and analog outputs and will work if you just want disc playback..Russ
Are the 93 and 83 WiFi capable...or at least do they have Ethernet input?
James,I believe most will not, or cannot, discern the differences in these newer lossless surround formats because they never improved their 5.1 or 7.1 setups from the days of DD. In those days users were told to throw any ole' surrounds back there (let alone AVR-based amplification) because all they needed to address were foley effects and very low bandwidth ambiance signals. Those days are gone. All channels (with either the lossless BD codecs or linear PCM) are now full range! I can pick out a DD track vs TrueHD in 5 seconds. But then I have full range identical speakers as my high rez surrounds. Heck even with my separate fairly full range Alon Centris movie surrounds I can pick out lossy surround info. Yeah, core DTS (and DTS24/96, nothing more than lossy core and a faux extention) are good, but nothing comapred to the full range growls coming out of movie surround tracks these days.
I would have thought there were several black boxes as described in the OP, allowing users to upgrade when HDMI and TrueHD first appeared.
You can only get true hd from blu ray, and so most blu ray players came with analog outs and there was no need for a "black box".
The Hobbit blu ray is DTS-HD Master Audio 7 channel, but does seem to have 5 channel DD French / Spanish soundtrack options. So though you'll have to listen to it in foreign language, you can at least get a feel for the difference w/out swapping the disk. Alternatively the hobbit "combo pack" comes w/ a DVD as well, which is dolby digital.Best of luck & enjoy!