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Toshiba Toshiba HD-A2

79

Good

  • Pros
  • Well-designed on-screen menus
  • Ethernet connection for interactivity and updates
  • Cons
  • Outputs 1080i image resolution
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Toshiba Toshiba HD-A2 Review

by Lincoln Spector

Low-cost HD DVD player has a well-designed remote control, but image quality is constrained by the unit's 1080i resolution.

Low-cost HD DVD player has a well-designed remote control, but image quality is constrained by the unit's 1080i resolution.

In Mission: Impossible III, Tom Cruise uses some fancy gadgetry to help him run up a brick wall. That's impressive in 1080p. But interlacing artifacts, as seen in the Toshiba HD-A2's 1080i playback, cause the wall to vibrate, making M:I3 downright psychedelic. And I don't mean that in a good way.

Toshiba's HD-A2 ($500 as of 2/20/07) can't deliver a 1080p image. Any 1080p-capable movie you watch on it--and that's most every movie available in the HD DVD format--is downgraded to the inferior 1080i high-def mode on its way to your television.

If your HDTV can't handle 1080p, the HD-A2 makes a tempting money-saver. It can natively decode Dolby TrueHD sound tracks. Over HDMI its audio was superb--this player tied with the HD-XA2 for second place in our audio tests, coming in just behind the Sony BDP-S1 (see our "High-Def Video Superguide"). However, it has only stereo, analog output; it cannot output analog multichannel audio. (By comparison, its sister model, the $1000 HD-XA2, can do so.) This model supports DTS-HD (core), and DTS Encore 5.1 output.

Other aspects of the HD-A2's design are a mixed bag. The setup menus are lovely to look at and easy to figure out. The front panel is well laid out, with a flap that hides most of the clearly labeled buttons and two specialized USB ports (labeled "Extension" ports"). The ports' function, according to Toshiba, is to add extra storage for implementing features such as the ability to download supplemental content. As yet, however, no titles use them.

Like its pricier sibling and the Xbox 360, the Toshiba HD-A2 can handle the HD DVD format's bookmarking capabilities. Both Toshiba players let you create bookmarks for favorite scenes using a button on the remote control. Because of the way the HD DVD format is designed, these bookmarks persist even after you eject the disc; however, the player's memory retains only ten such bookmarks at a time. In addition, to return to these bookmarks, you must navigate through the menu to view the disc's scenes; the menu will then show a new tab for "bookmarks" (previously not there). Neither of the Toshiba players' manuals offer details about this quirk.

The HD-A2's remote control is better than the one that comes with the HD-XA2. The rubberized buttons on the HD-A2's remote are softer to the touch than the metallic slivers on the HD-XA2's. The HD-A2's remote has too many buttons, though, and they all look and feel alike. Once you figure out what to click, the HD-A2 responds with a bit of lag--though other players, including the Sony BDP-S1, lag even more.

You can use the ethernet port to download firmware updates, as well as supplemental content provided by movie studios--once such content becomes available (perhaps later this year).

What didn't work well with this model (and the firmware PC World used in its tests) was its HDMI switching. You might, for example, switch the input on your amplifier while watching a movie to check a program that's airing on live TV. When I switched away from the HDMI input the player was using on one of our test televisions, a Pioneer Elite PRO-HD1, the HD-A2 locked up and had to be restarted. Toshiba said it was looking into what might have caused this glitch.

At $500, the HD-A2 is the least expensive stand-alone high-def player--for now. If you opt for that low price, however, you'll be making sacrifices in resolution and audio. If you're basing your decision on price, keep an eye out for specials--you may be able to find other players, such as the Samsung BD-P1000 Blu-ray Disc player, that offer superior, noninterlaced image performance for not too much more.

Lincoln Spector

User Reviews for Toshiba Toshiba HD-A2

  • Reviewed by: free2speak

    Duration of ownership: 2 Months

    Strengths: Excellent video and audio for a little money.

    Weaknesses: Slow startup.

    Overall Evaluation: I am very pleased with the HD-A2. I have watched around 20 movies since I purchased the player. My HDTV is 1080i so the HD-A2 is a perfect match with great image quality. The sound is sent as a very rich DTS sidnal over the optical cable. The internet connection works very well for firmware updates, and movie content. There are many unique interactive features that work well on this HD DVD player. I would definately buy again.

  • Reviewed by: klingon

    Duration of ownership: 2 Months

    Strengths: Phenominal pic quality and fantastic upscaling of standard definition DVDs!!

    Weaknesses: No 5.1 analog output! :(

    Overall Evaluation: This is a fantastic piece of equipment, anyone who says just because it does 1080i and not 1080p that it doesnt have the resolution of AX2 is sadly mistaken and needs to do some research including Mr Lincln, please read up a little before reviewing products.All HD-DVD and Blu-ray discs will encode film-sourced material in full 1920x1080 progressive scan resolution at 24 frames per second. The reason why we get interlacing artifacts in a 1080i signal is that the frame was originally captured in interlaced format, with the odd scan lines and even scan lines being recorded at two different moments in time. When you reassemble two fields that are offset in time, you get jaggies, moire patterns, barber pole effects, and line twitter. That is not true of either HD-DVD or Blu-ray film transfers since the image is scanned progressively from a film frame that represents a single moment in time. Therefore we would expect to see none of the common evidence of deinterlacing when watching HD-DVD or Blu-ray movies that are being transmitted via 1080i Now what our reviewer here is refering to as being artifacts while watching Mission imposible could be introduced by the TV which probably doesnt have a good deinterlacing chip, if he would have bothered to use a high quality progressive display device he wouldnt have complaned! Hope he'll be carefull in his future reviews! regards Khan

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