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ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012 READ ONLY FORUM
This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and
1st March February 2012
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Opportunity knocks! Ask Dave Moulton about the possible benefits of using a power conditioner on ICEpower amp'ed BeoLab speakers!
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A friend thought I'd gone mad when I set up his BL2 in this manner, until he heard what it could do when positioned correctly. Which means you can't go for cosmetics - for best possible bass performance you have to "go with the waves." With my BL5s I spent quite a bit of time finding the best place in the room to get the best bass
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Put the BL2 where you usually sit and listen, watch. Really. Put it in your couch, for instance, or in your listening chair. But at the height of your head. Then move around in front of it, close to where you were thinking of placing it, until you find where the bass sounds the best. Here your head has to be down on the floor, at the height of the BL2
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moxxey: 355f: The BV4 50 and the BV9 are of course an identical product in performance terms. It's weird 335F. I agree with most of what you say about plasma, but if I take a look at, say, Casino Royale on Blu-ray on my BV7-40 MKIII compared to the BV4-50, the BV4-50 looks like it has more noise reduction. It looks more like how the Blu-ray DVD
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People should be wary of knocking the hardware for signal related problems. I had my cable wiring and junction box replaced/checked when I bought my flatscreen. They measured the signal strength at the various outlets in my apartment and found it far below where it should be. Prior to the reinstallation I had a grainy and at times jittery SD picture
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I'm with puncher here. Power conditioners are hi-fi boondoggles. A surge suppressor might be sensible if your net has a history of erratic power surges, but otherwise there is little to be gotten with the expensive conditioners -- no one is able to pick them out in blind tests.
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Then, when you're in coverflow mode, when you hit the PLAY arrow, you'll get up the various DVDs you have stored under the movie cover, with the first one at the top. Just click the one you want to play. Ideally, it would be nice if it showed episode numbers or another tag, but it's fairly easy to keep tabs on. Here it's the top one
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Try just linking the DVDs into the same window, in the same sequence as the episodes. I get a number of DVD tags underneath one another, like in this example. See the next post for the view detail.
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That's how large they are. I have chosen to store them at full resolution, as I want to be able to have the best possible PQ for projection, when going from DVDs. (Imagine a Blu-ray disk at 30GB ...) Using MactheRipper you can strip trailers, behind-the-scenes, interviews, irrelevant audio-tracks, etc, in order to slim the file. But I haven't
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Ultimate AV-Mag is not in a second's doubt as to the superiority of PS3 as a BD player. http://www.guidetohometheater.com/news/1207poty/
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