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Running does optical not take advantage of the superior sound that a Blu-ray has to offer. The Sony optical output specs may be different than my Oppo, check and see.As far as I know the optical output limits resolution to 640 kbit/s and DTS (core) to 1.5 mbps.My OPPO BDP-103 manual states:Due to bandwidth limitations, high resolution audio formats such as Dolby Digital Plus, DolbyTrueHD, DTS-HD High Resolution and DTS-HD Master Audio cannot be sent through thecoaxial or optical digital audio output. A reduced resolution version of the same audio trackwill be output instead. To listen to high resolution audio formats in their best quality, pleaseuse the HDMI connection...Keeping your setup simple is good too. Hopefully the info above will help someone else. Home theater and Blu-ray can be a confusing topic.
I’m now very confused about the whole point of this topic. If you don’t care about picture and sound quality why even post here??With a few hundred Blurays and even more DVD’s it’s easy to say that DVD’s are noticeably lesser in both sound and picture quality. Even streaming is almost always better than DVD in picture quality and at least equal in sound quality. Obviously not all BD’s take advantage of everything the format offers but that is not a reason to ignore the benefits. Audio dialog can sometimes be a problem with movies but most BD players offer options to compress the sound which almost always solves that problem. OTOH, if picture and sound quality are not priorities then you certainly shouldn’t bother with Bluray.
So your idea of higher sound quality is unintelligible dialog? Not being able to turn the volume up to hear it either because of the mix
I'm not sure that the "mix" being intended for 5.1 listening has anything to do with sound quality; mix problems would more appropriately be categorized as personal listenability preferences. There are a variety of hardware and software solutions to your problems, although any of them may involve new purchases; none of this is related to the audio quality of blurays.
I don’t see how any of that fixes it. As far as I’m concerned there’s just a bunch of lazy and unwilling to spend a buck to make things right.
90% of consumers if not substantially higher will buy an expensive TV, but only at most purchase a soundbar...So Blu-Ray's suck.
I have stereo only and blu rays sound fine.
You have a preamp with gain, decent hearing, and high enough clarity that you probably can't miss what you're hearing. Only one of these may be a factor for average listening.