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ISF, Speakers, TVs
ISF SOS I will be buying my gear from Ultimate Electronics here in town, and they offer a calibration service, though at $300, it seems a bit pricier than I remember. Reading about the number of judgment calls required to get good results during calibration in some of your reviews prompted this inquiry. Isaac Bouchard You are correct that TV calibration involves a few judgment calls, so trying to ascertain the skill of a particular technician could be important. On the other hand, much of the process is objective, and anyone with an ISF or THX certification has met certain criteria in terms of knowledge and judgment, so I would be relatively confident of anyone with either of those certifications. And $300 for a full grayscale calibration is actually quite reasonable these daysI've seen fees as high as $500. If the Ultimate Electronics tech is ISF or THX certified, I'd probably go with them because they are more likely to know the ins and outs of the specific products they sell.
Speaker Shopping The two main options I've focused on are the Aperion Intimus 4B Harmony SD system or the Klipsch Synergy Quintet III system with a Klipsch Synergy SUB-10 subwoofer. Which of these systems would you recommend, or is there another product that would be better? Chris Prokopiak We haven't reviewed either of these systems, but Ultimate AV reviewed the Aperion Intimus 5B system, and reviewer Steve Guttenberg liked it a lot. In that review, he said that the 4B system gives you 80 percent of the 5B's performance for half the price. Klipsch also makes great speaker systems, such as the HD Theater 500 for only $600, though reviewer Mark Fleischmann was unimpressed with the subwoofer. Other good speaker systems in the slightly over-$1000 range include the PSB Alpha B1 and Mordaunt-Short Alumni. My personal choices among these would be the Aperion, PSB, and Mordaunt-Short.
Go Bigger Also, if I'll be watching mostly Blu-ray and DVD movies on a good-quality Blu-ray player (e.g., Pioneer BDP-320 or Panasonic DMP-BD60), what specs really matter? By the way, the living room is 12x14 feet and the viewing distance to the TV will be about 10 feet. Antonio Giaccio At a seating distance of 10 feet, you could go even larger to 60 or 65 inches. I agree that plasma will generally provide a better picture. You can probably still find a 60-inch Pioneer Kuro plasma within your budgeton Amazon, for example, I recently saw the PDP-6020FD 60-incher for $3700 (it was $5500 list). I must add that I've seen a lot of complaints about Pioneer plasmas buzzing audibly, but I've never experienced this myself during reviews. As for a Blu-ray player, one of the specs that matters to me is the ability to internally decode Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD to PCM and send that via HDMI to the A/V receiver. Another is an Ethernet port that lets you update the firmware online. I don't care about multichannel analog outputs or BD-Live, though that is pretty standard these days. In my experience, Pioneer Blu-ray players have been frustratingly slow, while Panasonic players are very highly regarded. If you have a home-theater question, please send it to scott.wilkinson@sorc.com. < Previous Post | Blog Home | Next Post >
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