Refine search for Home Cinema
Pioneer DV-600AV DVD Player Review
| Author | Danny Phillips |
| Published | 14th Apr 2008 |
| Manufacturer | Pioneer |
| Price | £95.61 (Exc VAT) |
| as reviewed | £109.95 (Inc VAT) |
| Latest Price |
| Features | ![]() |
| Performance | ![]() |
| Value | ![]() |
| Overall | ![]() |

The rear panel is reassuringly busy, teeming with all the connections you need to integrate the player into your system. The standout is HDMI, which outputs all-digital video in 1080p, 1080i and 720p flavours and can also send DVD-A/SACD signals to your receiver. If your amp isn't that advanced, then multichannel audio can be transferred using the 5.1-channel analogue outputs, which are also used to carry Dolby Digital and DTS soundtracks from the built-in decoders - another of this deck's many talents. You can, of course, send Dolby Digital and DTS bitstreams to your amp digitally using either the optical or coaxial outputs.

Click to enlarge
Those with non-HDMI equipped TVs can use the RGB-capable SCART, component video, S-video or composite outputs (though we wouldn't recommend the latter unless you absolutely have to).
Elsewhere you'll discover some other nice features, such as the Video Adjust menu that lets you tweak the picture to perfection before it reaches your screen, plus bass management for multichannel audio playback and a range of DSP modes (Rock, Pop, Dance etc) that cater for wacky aural tastes.
As ever, the Pioneer's user interface is exemplary. It revolves around the central Home Menu screen, which uses jazzy graphics and icons to make it look more sophisticated than the uninspiring GUIs found on too many other players. The layout is also easy to digest, breaking things down into the key areas to help you find things quickly.

Click to enlarge
Despite the dodgy ghost-white finish, Pioneer also deserves praise for the remote's instinctive operation thanks to the intelligently arranged and well-labelled buttons. It also helps that the unit is very responsive to remote commands.
And like the operating system, the unit's performance is also faultless. With the HDMI output set to 1080p and viewed on a Full HD TV, the first thing to strike you is how deep and cinematic the picture looks. That's due mainly to the excellent black level, which makes objects in the picture seem almost three-dimensional and boosts detail clarity.
Latest 4 of 4 Comments
Have your say: Leave a comment below about this article.
vijay reddy said on 13th September 2008
Patrick Sunderland said on 5th November 2008
I'm sorry but I don't understand what Vijay means. Can anyone enlighten me please?
For the record I have a Panasonic HDMI Plasma tv (th-42pz70) not an LCD but I st... more
paul clark said on 14th December 2008
i have this player coupled with a Sharp LC42XD1E 42in LCD TV ,some of the pictures comming through this are superb but it depends what dvd you watch,Gladiator for example is fanta... more
Chet said on 14th January 2009
Hi, has anyone bought the Pioneer DV-610AV-K. It looks and sounds like an updated version of the above. Will this device play divx movies directly from a USB HD drive?
See all 4 comments on this article.
Add your comment
You must be logged in to comment. Login or register here.




4 comments
Email
TrustedReviews Newsletters
The one problem many of you may face is - all upconversion features are available under 16:9 compressed screen size format, and not under standard 16:9 format, and 90% LCD TVs are ... more