Advertisement

--------------------------------------------------------------
This story was printed from CNET Asia.
--------------------------------------------------------------
LG BD370 Blu-ray player
By Ty Pendlebury, CNET.com.au
25/03/2009
URL: http://asia.cnet.com/reviews/home_av/others/0,39037618,44633119p,00.htm

It's taken a couple of years, but it seems Blu-ray is finally gaining some ground as a format. Not only are decent movies finally coming out, the price and feature set of players have made them more compelling as well. Of course, the Sony PlayStation 3 still looms like the Close Encounters of the Third Kind mothership over the whole preceding, but fabulous little players like the LG BD370 are making the step toward Blu-ray that much more enticing.

Editors' note:

This review is based on evaluations conducted by our sister site CNET.com.au. Review ratings on similar products may differ due to differences in regional market trends and competing product lineups.

Design

For a company that prides itself on the design of its televisions, we found the BD370 to be curiously stodgy. While in essence most Blu-ray players look the same--squat boxes with glossy fronts--LG has tried to "pep up" the look of its player with a very 1980's-looking Power/Play button in the middle.

While the build is mostly solid, it's the disc tray which we have the most issues with. The tray looks (and probably is) like the one you'd find on a computer disc drive. It also opens and closes with some difficulty--a bit more spit and polish would have helped here.

The remote, on the other hand, is great. All the necessary functions are close at hand and it has the faux leather top that we liked on previous remotes.

Features

The features list on the BD370 is simply phenomenal--even if it is missing the US version's coup de grace, Netflix downloads. However, you still get one of the best value adds we've seen in a Blu-ray player so far: YouTube. Unlike the Apple TV that launched with a vetted list of YouTube videos, the full library of content is available via the remote which also includes an easy search function.

The second reason to buy this player is its comprehensive support for movie formats. Not only can you play DVDs and Blu-rays, it is also compatible with most of the popular formats including MPEG-2, MPEG-4 AVC (H.264), raw VC1 files, DivX, and for you HD fans, MKV. It will even playback videos encoded in the AVCHD camcorder format.

For a budget player, we were also impressed by its assortment of audio-decoding options. You can either let the BD370 decode both DTS-HD and Dolby TrueHD or let them through to the keeper (read: A/V receiver). This capability should please users who've bought a modern receiver and want the flexibility and potential improvements of letting it decode high-definition audio streams.

There is a high degree of control in the menu options within the BD370, but sometimes you need to know what the options mean. For example, you can set the 1080p display mode to 24Hz or 50Hz, and while this is helpful for people who want to enable Blu-ray compatibility quickly, it doesn't explain what 24Hz is. The audio options also let you fiddle with the sampling frequency, offering you a choice of 48, 96 or 192kHz--again with no explanation of what this means. Presumably, it will up- or downscale audio to the frequency you choose, with 192kHz being the highest-quality option. As a comparison, DVD is usually sampled in 48kHz. Moving on from audio, a small degree of interface customization is also offered. While you can't change the appearance of the menu options, you can change the wallpaper. Woot!

Outputs are limited to HDMI, component and composite for video. As for audio, you'll have a digital optical and coaxial, plus analog stereo-out. 5.1- or 7.1-channel discreet audio outputs are not included, unfortunately.

Performance

Given the budget nature of this player and its rather plain Jane looks, we were actually surprised by how well it performed once we had it plugged in. It's a confident Blu-ray player, and in some ways, better than our benchmark player, the PlayStation 3. While the BD370 wasn't able to render movement as smoothly as on the PlayStation 3, it threw up more details in the opening garden chase scene in Batman Begins. The tracking shot as the young Bruce runs through bushes showed more of the foliage on the LG, but was jerkier than the Sony console. The LG also has the advantage of outputting native HD audio streams where the PS3 doesn't. To further cement the LG's credentials as a Blu-ray player, it was able to ace the HQV Blu-ray test disc--a good test of a player's capabilities.

DVD playback was almost as good as its Blu-ray performance while not as impressive as a standalone kit for image depth. Nevertheless, it reproduced the King Kong DVD with no image noise, and yet still a usable amount of detail. Black levels, while not as inky as some players, were still very good and full of shadow details. Colors weren't as eye-popping as leaders like the Marantz range.

Now the player has been sent back home, the one feature we've found ourself missing the most is the YouTube feature. If only more devices had this! We would have preferred a QWERTY keyboard in the search but this doesn't really matter. The player features a great-looking interface with five videos across. It's a little slow to navigate as it takes about 5 seconds to populate the next page, but it's not a huge problem. However, some search queries are more effective on the Web than through the interface. For example, we tried searching for a song by the band The Lonely Island (language warning), and couldn't find the official videos in the first five pages, whereas a quick YouTube search on the Web brought it up as first.

While the player sadly isn't able to stream files from your network, plugging a memory key in was relatively straightforward. To test the player, we used a 720p MKV movie file, which the LG recognized straightaway and it looked fantastic. If you've specifically been searching for support of codecs other than bog-standard DivX, this could be the player to get.

Finally, the first generation of Blu-ray players were Jurassically slow, taking a minute or longer to play a disc from a cold start. While the PS3 is still lightning quick, the LG is leading the way for standalone players with its Quick Load feature--it took Mission: Impossible III just 22 seconds to play from standby.
Specs
General
TypeBlu-ray player
Onboard featuresBlu-ray/DVD/CD/JPEG/MP3/DivX/AVCHD/MPEG-1/MPEG-2/MPEG-4 AVC playback; onboard Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus, DTS-HD MA/HR decoder; Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus and DTS-HD MA/HR bitstream output; 1080p DVD upscaling; 1080p24 video output via HDMI 1.3; Simplink (HDMI-CEC); Profile 2.0; instant tray open.
ConnectivityHDMI; component-video; composite-video; digital optical audio; digital coaxial audio; network port; USB port.
Supported media formatsVideo: Blu-ray, DVD, Audio: CD, CD-R/-RW