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Pioneer BDP-LX71 Blu-ray Player Review
| Author | Danny Phillips |
| Published | 6th Nov 2008 |
| Manufacturer | Pioneer |
| Price | £510.43 (Exc VAT) |
| as reviewed | £586.99 (Inc VAT) |
| Latest Price | Click here |
| Design | ![]() |
| Features | ![]() |
| Performance | ![]() |
| Value | ![]() |
| Overall | ![]() |

We also slipped in the Silicon Optix HQV Benchmark Blu-ray disc and it blitzed all of the tests, with the most impressive achievement being its flawless suppression of jaggies during the rotating bar patterns - the stepping effect you get on several other players is completely smoothed out, testament to the superb video processing inside. Also remarkable is the film resolution loss test in which the camera pans across an empty stadium - we've never seen the rows of red seats looking sharper or steadier.
The LX71 treats DVDs with the same level of care and attention that it lavishes on Blu-ray discs, producing sharp, artefact-free playback with a wide range of movies. The DVD version of the HQV disc revealed the same assured performance as the hi-def version, marking this out as a remarkable DVD upscaler.
The LX71 gets a clean bill of health in the audio department too, offering an open and finely detailed presentation of Transformers' Dolby True HD track through the analogue outputs. With the climactic showdown between Optimus and Megatron, its dynamic and expansive soundstage helps deliver the sense of grandeur and excitement that this scene deserves, and you can almost feel the deck savouring every gunshot, explosion and clank of metal. We also piped the signal in bitstream and PCM form to our Onkyo receiver over an HDMI connection and were equally blown away by what we heard.
Finally the Pioneer delivers one of the best music performances we've heard from a Blu-ray player, making Miles Davis' Kind of Blue sound wonderfully organic and detailed though the dedicated analogue stereo outputs.
Verdict
If you're serious about movies and want the very best Blu-ray performance, then look no further than the BDP-LX71. Its image quality is the best we've seen so far, beating even the best decks from Panasonic and Sony and leaving you in no doubt as to where that extra money has gone. It's also a dab hand with DVDs, which is good news if you have a big collection of standard-def discs that you don't want to replace.
What's more, its build quality is immaculate, it looks gorgeous and its advanced picture adjustments make it a videophile's dream deck. But don't let its many positives make you lose sight of the fact that its feature set is far from perfect - the Profile 1.1 spec (with no chance of upgrading) means it will never let you enjoy the complete Blu-ray experience, and the lack of decoded DTS HD Master Audio from the analogue outputs - however limited its appeal may be - should have been included from the box at this sort of price.
Latest 4 of 8 Comments
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Kyle Mitchell said on 7th November 2008
niftynigel said on 10th November 2008
According to the manual (Page 50) (I haven't got the player, but downloaded the excellent manual nonetheless), DTS-HD Master Audio and High Res are output as PCM through the a... more
Peter Allen said on 11th November 2008
niftynigel,
I agree with all you say, but your first statement is only half right! Page 50 of the manual says that when the source is DTS-HD HR or DTS-HD MA, then th... more
Ian said on 29th November 2008
Danny/ All, I am considering buying the BDP-LX71 or the panasonic dmp bd-55 which is a little less expensive. Ultimately I am looking for best video and audio quality. Any thoughts... more
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Danny,
You said "it can decode DTS HD MA and DTS HD into hi-res PCM when using the HDMI output". I don't believe this is true, it can bitstream DTS-HD... more