Category: (CE)
36 new, starting at Too low to display
17 used, starting at $42.99
The Sony DVP-NS710H breathes new life into your DVD collection by upscaling your existing DVDs to 1080p near HD resolution via an HDMI connection. It includes other high-end A/V features such as BRAVIA Sync, which gives you one-remote access and control of your DVD player and other BRAVIA Sync-compatible devices.
Great DVD playerReviewed by Jeff, 2010-03-09
After going through 3 DVD players of various brands over the last year, I finally found one that works great. I highly recommend this DVD player. Easy to use, great picture, and reliable.
Beautiful picture, but problems with some DVD+R discsReviewed by T. Lewandowski, 2010-03-07
I own two of these DVP-NS710H/B units; I ordered the second because
I thought the first one was dying as it was stuttering and freezing
on some of my DVD+R discs. I've been producing my own DVD's
(DVD+/-R and DL) for many years and until a year ago, was using an
earlier Sony DVD model; the DVP-NS75H. The NS75 unit functioned
flawlessly and produced the same picture quality as the NS710 on my
42" 1080i HDTV.
I bought the NS710 as a spare...a backup to my NS75, but began
using it regularly until I noticed it freezing up on some Ritek,
TDK, and Maxell DVD-R and DVD+R discs. Strangely enough, it was
only the inkjet printable discs that caused the problem, and it was
several different lots of manufactured discs. But ALL of these
discs played just fine in the older NS75! In fact, I have never
encountered a disc that hasn't played properly on the
DVP-NS75H!
So I purchased a replacement NS710, but to no avail. The discs
still skipped and/or froze on the replacement NS710...and would
still play fine on the older NS75. Now I have two NS710's that play
95% of my DVD+/-R collection without a problem. I've recently
purchased a second DVP-NS75H to keep as a backup.
So, why the backup, anyway? I have a HUGE DVD collection, and these
Sony players produce the nicest upscale picture quality that I've
seen from an upscale player. My Hitachi HDTV does a pretty nice job
on its own, but not quite as nice as these Sony's. I've tried a
couple of other brand DVD players (Panasonic, JVC, LG, Toshiba),
but I like the features with these Sony's ... ESPECIALLY the
multi-disc resume, which remembers the position of up to 6 DVD's.
The Slow and Fast Playback WITH SOUND is also nice.
I don't know why this NS710 is having problems with some of my
recordable DVD's, but it does. But otherwise, the DVP-NS710H/B's
picture quality is outstanding; the deck is solid with nice
features; VERY inexpensive. Nice little features, like displaying a
dics' TITLE and displaying JACKET_P pictures are also features
common to Sony DVD players.
Great purchaseReviewed by Stephanie Gantman, 2010-03-05
I was completely happy with my new DVD player. I wanted an upscaling player for my new TV and have had no complaints about the quality of the dvds. I even play cds through it.
A good option for new but not Blu-rayReviewed by Amy Lin, 2010-03-05
I've only had this player a couple of days, so I can't speak to
reliability. I also haven't read the whole manual yet, so there may
be functionality I've missed discovering. I was convinced to buy by
the good reviews here and the excellent pricepoint for a player
that will make my old DVDs look good on my new giant HDTV. I don't
have any Blu-ray discs and don't plan on buying any soon, so this
was a good option for an inexpensive upconverting player without
Blu-ray capability.
The upconverted video quality is actually slightly better than the
XBox 360 I'd been using before (which had convinced me I wanted to
invest in an upconverting player in the first place). I checked
back-to-back with the opening of the Ratatouille DVD and found the
text to be less pixelated and both moving and still scenes slightly
clearer with this player.
It has Anynet+ capability when connected with HDMI (an inexpensive
AmazonBasics cable), which I didn't realize. This means that my
Samsung TV remote can control basic DVD player functions, the TV
knows when the player's been turned on and auto switches to its
source, turning the TV off will turn the player off, and turning
the player on will even turn the TV on.
It's also really skinny, but I guess that's standard these days. My
only real complaint thus far is that the power cord is unusually
short (by about 6"). Instead of placing it where the old DVD player
was, I had to rearrange my components in the entertainment center
to put the player in another place so its cord could actually reach
the UPS. The button design is kind of stupid, with only very basic
buttons actually on the top corner of the unit instead of the front
panel. There's no eject button on the remote, but I knew that from
other reviews; I still miss it, though, regardless of whether it
makes sense. It takes a few seconds longer than my old Pioneer
player to power up and open the tray when the eject button is
pressed, but its other actions are plenty fast. I miss the nice
information display on the Pioneer that showed both track and
elapsed time, as well as the audio output channels all on one
display, but I can at least cycle through most of the various
readings with this one.
It doesn't seem to be able to send Dolby or DTS signals through the
TV to my speakers, but that is probably just a misconfiguration or
misunderstanding on my part that I haven't tracked down yet. The
player itself is amazingly silent. I can't tell there's a disc
spinning even in a silent room.
The way this player handles disc glitches is essentially the same
as the portable Sony player I have (which makes sense) - it freezes
on the last readable image and then scans forward looking for the
next readable bit, becoming fairly unresponsive to external
commands while it does this. When it finds a playable bit of a
second or two, it skips directly there, and may keep searching for
the next one if the disc is still glitchy. It's hard to tell that
it's doing this, however, and instead of low quality video through
the scratches and timer moving to show it's looking like my old
Pioneer player would give, you just skip chunks of the film,
without having a sense of how much you've missed unless you noted
the before and after timer readings.
We tested the slow play option briefly last night, but it's pretty
rudimentary - a single button cycles through a range of play
speeds, from I think 1.4x down by 0.2x increments to 0.6x, then
back to the 1.4x. I need to look at the remote again, but I don't
think there's any sort of frame advance/ultra-slow function
available.
Upconverts as well as the PS3Reviewed by Verified Purchases Only, 2010-03-05
I bought this very slim DVD player solely for the purpose of
up-converting DVD's. I own an older Blu-Ray player and a Fat PS3.
This DVD player's picture with HDMI cables is as good as either
(without the delay). The sound is good also. I own a Sony HTCT100
Sound Bar with Subwoofer - Black, and the speaker picks it up when
I hook one end of the HDMI cable to the TV and the other end to the
DVD player. I'm not sure the other reviewer who complained about
the DVD player not having an optical output really understood that
you don't have to use the cheapie A/V cables with today's
technology. Maybe, it's because I have the PS3 HDMI cable going to
the soundbar then going to the TV. I'm not really sure, but the
speaker is bypassed. Somehow, the speaker picks it up.
Anyway, the up-converting and sound are better than expected. Best
sixty dollars I've spent in a long time.