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#1
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Player New in the August Issue of On Sound and Music, the latest take on a
Universal Player that just may be the best Single Box All Format Player today, the McCormack UDP-1. Take a look at http://www.onsoundandmusic.com/issue...408-UDP-1.html. Much more at On Sound and Music, mixing the best of the High End with the Best of Pro Sound http://www.onsoundandmusic.com. |
#2
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On Wed, 04 Aug 2004 20:23:10 -0500, analyst
wrote: Player New in the August Issue of On Sound and Music, the latest take on a Universal Player that just may be the best Single Box All Format Player today, the McCormack UDP-1. Take a look at http://www.onsoundandmusic.com/issue...408-UDP-1.html. If only to revel in a page of unfocussed, wooly-thinking audiophile blather :-) |
#3
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"Laurence Payne" wrote in
message On Wed, 04 Aug 2004 20:23:10 -0500, analyst wrote: Player New in the August Issue of On Sound and Music, the latest take on a Universal Player that just may be the best Single Box All Format Player today, the McCormack UDP-1. Take a look at http://www.onsoundandmusic.com/issue...408-UDP-1.html. If only to revel in a page of unfocussed, wooly-thinking audiophile blather :-) Take a look at the picture of the interior of the this *amazing* DVD player (Figure 3). What I see is the transport and major circuit cards of a commodity player (center, lower right), back-ended by MacCormack's *SOTA contributions*. Those appear to be a power supply board and output buffer board, both stylishly decorated with large film capacitors. Ironically, a switchmode power supply, probably belonging to the origional commodity player appears to be standing up vertically, between the two MacCormack-sourced boards. Perhaps someone who services a variety of mainstream DVD players could ID the actual source of the majority of the guts of this device. They could be from an APEX, for all I know... or maybe the Pioneer universal DVD player that sells for under $200. This could be one way to beat the high development costs usually associated with building a DVD player - scrap out a good mainstream box, and repackage the guts with some snake-oil wrapped around it, so that high end reviewers can feel comfortable with it. Oh, and jack up the price by a factor of say, 50? |
#4
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Does look like a Pioneer player mech, but the picture isn't quite good
enough to be sure. Mark Z. -- Please reply only to Group. I regret this is necessary. Viruses and spam have rendered my regular e-mail address useless. "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Laurence Payne" wrote in message On Wed, 04 Aug 2004 20:23:10 -0500, analyst wrote: Player New in the August Issue of On Sound and Music, the latest take on a Universal Player that just may be the best Single Box All Format Player today, the McCormack UDP-1. Take a look at http://www.onsoundandmusic.com/issue...408-UDP-1.html. If only to revel in a page of unfocussed, wooly-thinking audiophile blather :-) Take a look at the picture of the interior of the this *amazing* DVD player (Figure 3). What I see is the transport and major circuit cards of a commodity player (center, lower right), back-ended by MacCormack's *SOTA contributions*. Those appear to be a power supply board and output buffer board, both stylishly decorated with large film capacitors. Ironically, a switchmode power supply, probably belonging to the origional commodity player appears to be standing up vertically, between the two MacCormack-sourced boards. Perhaps someone who services a variety of mainstream DVD players could ID the actual source of the majority of the guts of this device. They could be from an APEX, for all I know... or maybe the Pioneer universal DVD player that sells for under $200. This could be one way to beat the high development costs usually associated with building a DVD player - scrap out a good mainstream box, and repackage the guts with some snake-oil wrapped around it, so that high end reviewers can feel comfortable with it. Oh, and jack up the price by a factor of say, 50? |
#5
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"Mark D. Zacharias" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Laurence Payne" wrote in message On Wed, 04 Aug 2004 20:23:10 -0500, analyst wrote: Player New in the August Issue of On Sound and Music, the latest take on a Universal Player that just may be the best Single Box All Format Player today, the McCormack UDP-1. Take a look at http://www.onsoundandmusic.com/issue...408-UDP-1.html. If only to revel in a page of unfocussed, wooly-thinking audiophile blather :-) Take a look at the picture of the interior of the this *amazing* DVD player (Figure 3). What I see is the transport and major circuit cards of a commodity player (center, lower right), back-ended by MacCormack's *SOTA contributions*. Those appear to be a power supply board and output buffer board, both stylishly decorated with large film capacitors. Ironically, a switchmode power supply, probably belonging to the origional commodity player appears to be standing up vertically, between the two MacCormack-sourced boards. Perhaps someone who services a variety of mainstream DVD players could ID the actual source of the majority of the guts of this device. They could be from an APEX, for all I know... or maybe the Pioneer universal DVD player that sells for under $200. This could be one way to beat the high development costs usually associated with building a DVD player - scrap out a good mainstream box, and repackage the guts with some snake-oil wrapped around it, so that high end reviewers can feel comfortable with it. Oh, and jack up the price by a factor of say, 50? Does look like a Pioneer player mech, but the picture isn't quite good enough to be sure. Over in RAP, somone told an anecdote about a line of Meridian CD players that were the guts of Phillips players, similarly repackaged, but with a few chips changed. Apparently this sort of thing has been very common in the high end, and for some time. |
#6
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On Thu, 5 Aug 2004 22:15:51 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: Apparently this sort of thing has been very common in the high end, and for some time. Have the audiophiles discovered room treatment yet? The topic has certainly leapt to the forefront in the home-studio world. Was it about 1999 we all discovered affordable large-diaphragm microphones? Then it was esoteric pre-amps. This year is definitely room treatments. What's next? We haven't done magic cables yet. Wouldn't it be nice if it was minimalist recording techniques in real stereo? Nah! Not enough new gear to buy :-) |
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