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Philips DVDQ35AT Progressive-Scan DVD Player

Philips DVDQ35AT Progressive-Scan DVD Player

List Price: $159.99
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Product Info Reviews

Features:
  • Plays DVD Video, video CD, and audio CD
  • Compatible with CD-Rs and CD-RWs loaded with MP3 and AAC files
  • Includes progressive-scan compatibility with 3:2 pulldown for distortion-free viewing of 24 fps movies
  • Optical and coaxial digital-audio outputs pass Dolby Digital and DTS surround signals
  • 5-disc resume remembers your jumping-off point on the last 5 DVDs played


Description:

Philips's affordable DVDQ35AT features high-end progressive-scan component-video outputs, built-in MP3 and AAC (Advanced Audio Codec) music decoding, and a dual-laser pickup for compatibility with not only DVDs and CDs, but also CD-Rs and CD-RWs. Whether you already have an HDTV or you're thinking of getting one, the DVDQ35AT stands ready to deliver the full potential of DVDs. Progressive scanning, referred to as 480p for the number of horizontal lines that compose the video image, creates a picture using twice the scan lines of a conventional DVD picture, providing higher resolution and sharper images while eliminating nearly all motion artifacts. The DVDQ35AT also performs 3:2 pulldown. DVD mastering introduces a common distortion when adjusting 24 frames-per-second movies to 30 fps video; 3:2 pulldown digitally corrects this distortion, removing the redundant information to display a film-frame-accurate picture.

A set of left-right analog-audio outputs channel audio to Dolby Pro Logic receivers and stereo televisions. Both Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1-channel surround-sound signals can be routed through the player's digital-audio outputs (one each of RCA coaxial and Toslink optical) for direct connection to a full-featured audio-video receiver. This player also decodes Dolby Digital signals, offering six analog RCA terminals (for left, center, right, subwoofer, and left and right surround channels) for routing surround sound to multichannel receivers that don't have onboard Dolby processing. Playback options include five-disc resume, which lets you pick up where you left off on five most recently viewed DVDs, and 3D sound for virtual surround sound from two speakers.

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