Panasonic DMP-BDT310 review
If you've got an older HDMI 1.3 or earlier amp, but have a 3D TV, this is the player for you
When playing 3D movies the player has some tricks up its sleeve. You can adjust the 3D depth, although this can swing from being quite subtle to headache inducing. More useful is the ability to add a frame around the image. This fades the main picture to the colour frame you choose (black is best), so that the image doesn’t touch the bezel of the screen. It helps create the illusion of 3D without the harsh lines of the bezel interrupting. It’s not going to be for everyone, but it’s a good option.
As most people seem to want to have the option, there’s a 2D-to-3D conversion mode. As you can expect, it’s not particularly good. Our advice is to watch 2D movies in 2D and 3D movies in 3D.
For other forms of entertainment, you can hook the BDT310 up to your home network using either the wired network port or the built-in 802.11n wireless. From here you can stream videos, music and photos from a UPnP server. We found that most of our test videos worked, but our HD MKV file kept pausing during playback over wired or wireless.
The same kinds of files can also be played from USB devices, plugged into either the front or rear USB ports. When we connected a USB flash drive our test MKV file played perfectly, showing that our network speed was to blame. If you’re having problems with HD files, it’s worth connecting storage directly.
Panasonic has upgraded its TVs this year to Viera Connect, but the BDT310 still uses the older Viera Cast system. This doesn’t have access to iPlayer, which is a shame. With just YouTube, Picasa Web Albums and AceTrax video rental available, it’s lacking when compared to internet portals from Samsung and Sony.
There’s all of the other usual features that you’d expect to find in a modern Blu-ray player, including Deep Color and YCbCr (4:4:4) colour output.
There are cheaper Blu-ray players and there are ones with better internet portals, but if you don’t care about internet content (or you’ve got this on your TV) and have an older amp, this is the player to buy. Panasonic also sells a version with just a single HDMI output, the DMP-BDT210, but it’s only around £10 cheaper.
Details | |
---|---|
Price | £215 |
Rating | **** |
Buying Information | |
Price | £215 |
Warranty | one year RTB |
Supplier | http://www.amazon.co.uk |
Details | www.panasonic.co.uk |
Features and Connections | |
Blu-ray profile | 2.0 |
HDMI outputs | 2 |
HDMI Version | 1.4 |
Component outputs | 0 |
S-video output | 0 |
Composite outputs | 1 |
Stereo phono outputs | 1 |
Coaxial S/PDIF outputs | 0 |
Optical S/PDIF outputs | 1 |
Wired network ports | 1x 10/100/1000 |
Wireless standard | 802.11n |
USB ports | 2 |
Mass storage support | yes |
Supported memory cards | SDHC |
Other connections | none |
BD Live storage | USB |
Video, Audio and Photo | |
Video playback formats | DivX, XviD, MKV, AVCHD, MPEG2 |
Image viewing formats | JPEG |
Audio playback formats | MP3 |
YouTube streaming | yes |
Audio | |
Dynamic Range Control | yes |
Dolby TrueHD support | yes |
DTS-HD MA support | yes |
Physical | |
Power consumption standby | 0W |
Power consumption on | 6W |
Size | 430x179x35mmmm |