Philips DVP5982 1080p Upscaling DVD Player | 
| Brand: Philips Category: CE
List Price: $89.99 Buy New: $56.75 You Save: $33.24 (37%)
Rating: 263 reviews Sales Rank: 202
Color: Black Media: Electronics Batteries Included: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 5.2 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 17.1 x 1.5 Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product. Warranty: 90 days warranty
MPN: DVP5982/37 Model: DVP5982/37 UPC: 609585129504 EAN: 0609585129504 ASIN: B000N254LU
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand New, Still Sealed in Box. HDMI 1080p Upscaling DVD Player by Philips. Ships out FAST DVP5982.
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| Features:
| • | 1080p Upscaling, increases the picture resolution | | • | DivX, plays Mpeg4 video downloads from PC | | • | Progressive Scan | | • | Plays DVD, DVD-R/+R, CD, CD-R-RW, MP3/WMA, Jpeg picture CD | | • | Full size 420 mm chassis |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Bring your audio and video to life with an excellent HDMI DVD player for your TV. When you use an HDMI port for connectivity with your 1080p capable TV. this Philips DV5982 DVD Player will upconvert an ordinary DVD to appear as if it were native to 1080p. This extremely compact player plays a wide variety of DVD discs as well as DiVX discs. It can also double as a CD player and will even play CD-R discs that have encoded MP3 files. So when you add this component to your home-theater system, it delivers outstanding, versatile audio and video performance. Then there's more! Somewhat unique to DVD players is the inclusion of a USB port at the front of the unit. If you use a USB-equipped media card reader or a USB Flash pocket drive, you can export images from your digital camera or card-based camcorder directly to your player for throughput to your TV. Widescreen ready, this player is an ideal companion for your new widescreen HDTV in your home. DivX Ultra Certified for enhanced playback of DivX videos Plays CD, (S)VCD, DVD, DVD+R/RW, DVD-R/RW (Region 1) Plays DivX, MP3, WMA and JPEG digital camera photos DivX Certified for standard playback Signal to noise ratio - 90 Distortion and Noise (1kHz) - 65 dB Crosstalk (1kHz) - 70 dB Dynamic Range (1kHz) - 80 dB Frequency response - 30-20000 Hz Playback Media - CD, CD-R/CD-RW, Video CD/SVCD, DVD, DivX, DVD+R/+RW, DVD-R/-RW, DVD-Video Compression formats - MPEG1, MPEG2, DivX 3.11, DivX 4.x, DivX 5.x, DivX 6.0, DivX Ultra Playback Media - CD, MP3-CD, MP3-DVD, CD-R/RW, WMA-CD & Audio CD Compression format - Dolby Digital, MP3, PCM & WMA MP3 bit rates - 32 - 320 kbps Playback Media - DVD+R/+RW, DVD-R/-RW, CD-R/RW, Picture CD, Kodak Picture CD Picture compression format - JPEG, TIFF Rear Connectivity - Analog audio Left/Right out, Composite video (CVBS) output, HDMI output, Digital coaxial out, Component Video out Progressive Di
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| Customer Reviews: Read 258 more reviews...
Very Satisfied July 3, 2008 Dan TV (Central Pennsylvania, USA) I knew nothing about upscaling DVD players until I bought my Samsung LN40A550 40-Inch 1080p LCD HDTV and saw Amazon had this player listed as a sauggested purchase with it. I did some research and talkerd to a friend who knows about this stuff and decided to buy it. Boy am I glad I did! I connected to my TV with a 10G monster HDMI cable and the picture is amazing. There was no way I was going to convert my DVD collection to Blu-Ray, so this was the perfect solution. I also love the slim look.
Good for the price July 2, 2008 R. Jacobs (fl) For $60 this dvd player does its job very well. I don't have any young children and I don't think this player would hold up under any kind of roughness that kids might give it. You get a lot of control over the picture and I guess that's a good thing. Some people complained about the remote lacking different things, but I kind of like it that way.
Great purchase July 1, 2008 Jay D. Lohuis (Boulder, Co USA) For the price, this product does a great job upscaling regular DVD's to 1080... I am more than happy with it.
Piece of s*** June 28, 2008 Jason Faries 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
This DVD player is the biggest piece of s*** ever. I have always owened Toshiba players, but when my last one gave out the only brand they had at Costco was Phillips. NEVER AGAIN! The interface sucks, is very limited. The remote hardly has any thing other than basic features. Maybe they thought a memory option was cool, but when I take a movie out and then start it again, I do not want the DVD player to remember where I was. Just start the DAMN MOVIE! THis thing is a big waste money. DO NOT BUY IT! If you don't care about your player, fine, then buy it. But if you watch a lot of DVDs and appreciate a good player, AVOID THIS ONE LIKE THE PLAGUE!
About the whole PAL/NTSC thing... June 26, 2008 M. Andy Mckinney (Brodhead, KY United States) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
If you own a multi-system television (or a PAL television), you should be aware that all current USA Philips DVD players (including the 5982 and any models made thereafter) have the "TV Type" selections disabled in the firmware. The ONLY choice of output system (for U.S. machines) is NTSC, which is fine for most people, but if you have a multi-system TV, this means your PAL discs are going to undergo an unnecessary standards conversion (to NTSC).
All other worldwide versions of Philips machines still have NTSC, PAL and MULTI as choices in the "TV Type" menu. Why was it removed for the USA? My guess was to end calls to customer service for people complaining about black-and-white pictures (MULTI used to be the default choice back when US machines included all three types).
The 5960 is the last US model of this type/price point (including a USB port) to come with changeable TV type options, FYI.
I HAVE DISCOVERED A WORK-AROUND, however. You can change the player to multi-system by the following process:
1. open the tray 2. press "3" on the remote. The word "MULTI" should appear in the upper corner of the screen. Now, all NTSC discs will be output as NTSC, and all PAL discs will be output as PAL.
This process does NOT restore the TV type choices to the menu system, though (would take a firmware change to do that). However, if you wish to revert to "NTSC-only" output, simply go back through the menu system, go to TV Type and reselect "NTSC".
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