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Samsung BD-P4600 Turn over for more‌
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56 Samsung BD-P4600 ➜ £260 Approx ➜ www.samsung.co.uk
Off the wall design Jim Hill gets vertical with Samsung’s wall-hugging Blu-ray deck – the brand’s slimmest and fastest yet
F
irst to market with a Blu-ray player and now well into its third generation of machines, Samsung likes to think it’s taking the lead in Blu-ray hardware. You can’t accuse the brand of incremental upgrades either. Its latest premium player features a radical wall-mounting design, slashed disc-loading times and adds wireless networking as the new must-have feature. It’s also the
Samsung’s deck has an eye-catching design
Home Cinema Choice June 2009
world’s slimmest Blu-ray player – for the moment, anyway... For once, Samsung is aiming higher than both Panasonic and Sony in offering features, like the wi-fi dongle, that rival the Japanese brands simply don’t yet provide. This is a significant launch for the Korean corporation, but by streamlining its new player to a thickness of just an inch and a half, can it really offer the performance
Brotherly love: Got a 2009 Samsung LCD TV? Then this BD deck is an ideal aesthetic match
that a cinephile might demand, or is this just a player with a pretty face? The flat form factor has obvious advantages for anyone with a wall-mounted screen For starters, it neatly matches Samsung’s 40B650 TV, with its matching charcoal tint and clear plasticfringed bezel. Switched off, it looks a little bit like a wellsucked liquorice lozenge stuck to the wall, but once powered up
Reviews 57 the blue display is easy to read from across the room and the touch-sensitive buttons suggest sophistication. But there are drawbacks: you still have to hide the HDMI, Ethernet, power and optical cables somewhere, and in plenty of home cinema stacks, the side-mounted slot-loading mechanism will be a non-starter. Also, bear in mind that there are no component video or analogue multichannel outputs – as there simply isn’t any more room on the narrow connections panel. And no multichannel outs means owners of older AV receivers will be most disappointed. One thing that might ease cabling woes, though, is the
optional £50 USB dongle that will give this player wireless access to your wi-fi network.
Joy to ride Once connected, the Samsung is a real joy to use. Touch the illuminated power button or zap it with the ruby red remote and a simple onscreen menu appears straight away. The remote itself doesn’t have backlit buttons, but it feels robust enough to survive the knocks and dangers posed by exposure to your average household.
AV/CV Product: Profile 2.0 Blu-ray player Position: Samsung’s premium lifestyle BD player Peers: Sony BDP-S550; LG BD370
Blu-ray discs load quickly and can be ejected from play mode in a single go – a major step forward from the original players that took an age and a half to recognise each disc. The GUI is also a big improvement. While it’s not quite a match for Sony’s brilliant Xross Media Bar interface, it’s nonetheless reasonably fast and intuitive, and the graphics seem crisp and vivid. When you get to spinning Blu-ray movies they look equally vivid. The colour and contrast is striking and even fine detail, like the deliberate graininess of Man on Fire’s abduction sequence, is reproduced faithfully.
Fast motion presents no problem for the Samsung’s processing either. There is,
Full tilt: The supplied stand is a must for those who don’t want to wall-mount the player
however, an element of ghosting and video noise visible in pale backgrounds, like white walls and sky, that separates this machine from more accomplished players. That said, it doesn’t feel particularly compromised. The BD-P4600 can also play every audio track available on
June 2009 Home Cinema Choice
58 Reviews ➜ Specifications
Video upscaling: yes Up to 1080p Multiregion: no Region B (BD); R2 (DVD) HDMI: yes 1 x v1.3 Component: no HDMI instead Multichannel phono audio: no Only via HDMI and optical Digital audio: yes Optical and coaxial outputs SACD/DVD-A playback: no Missing Dolby TrueHD/DTS-HD/DTS-MA decoding: yes/yes Dolby TrueHD/DTS-HD/DTS-MA bitstream: yes/yes Profile 2.0: yes BD Live function via Ethernet Dimensions: 461(w) x 195(d) x 42(h)mm Weight: 1.8kg Also featuring: BD-Live for accessing online content; 1080p24 playback; optional wi-fi dongle for networking
➜ Tech Labs
On the menu: Explore your multimedia USB stick’s via the 4600’s new GUI
Blu-ray, with both Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio decoded inside the player and delivered over HDMI. When you find a really good DTS-HD MA soundtrack, like that on The X-Files: I Want To Believe, you’ll appreciate the high-resolution processing. However, if your system is up to the task, you may want to bitstream either format through HDMI instead; it’s a fair bet your AVR will have better DACs, giving a subtle expansion to the dynamic range.
Standard bearer What of bog-standard DVD playback? The BD-P4600 does a reasonable job of upscaling platters to 1080p, but you’ll see some noise and artefacting on a large screen; video scaling doesn’t seem to be this machine’s strongest feature. There are plenty of other features, though. Like with most of the latest generation of Blu-ray players, it’ll play much more than just BD, DVD and CD discs thanks to its USB port. Plug in any USB storage device and it’ll add a neat menu (pictured above) of the drive’s contents onto your TV screen – be they music, video or pictures. It’s really easy to scroll through content, making this a great medium with which to view digital snaps and watch downloaded video files. MPEG and .AVI files look a little cleaner when they are upscaled by the Samsung player, too. However, there’s no slideshow option for photos and no fancy jukebox settings for MP3s. Another feature that’s lacking here, which LG and Panasonic are Home Cinema Choice June 2009
pushing, is access to YouTube or other web services. Presumably, we’ll soon be seeing that on the next wave of Samsung’s machines. Perhaps that’s when we’ll see wi-fi actually built into the machine, too. Given the premium price tag here, it’s disappointing not to have that functionality included, especially as it’s available on the manufacturer’s current range of TVs. The Ethernet connection is useful in other ways, though, and it’s easy to set up. You don’t need to type in passwords or IP addresses – it’s a simple case of plug and play – and it means you’ll be able to pick up any firmware updates that come along. The model is Profile 2.0 compliant, of course, which means you can access the BD-Live functions on certain Blu-ray releases. I’m still waiting for decent BD-Live content to break cover, though...
DVD Playback Audio jitter: 838.9ps Video jitter: 5ns Video S/N ratio (composite): -63.3dB Chroma AM: -72.4dB Chroma PM: -69.5dB Response @ 5.8MHz (composite): -2.36B HQV Benchmark Jaggies test: PASS HQV Benchmark Text Crawl test: PASS Samsung’s BD player lacks output options, but has the advantage of a USB input. It plays BD-R discs, though locked up on the menu of our standard DVD+R test disc. With no component video or S-video outputs, some of our standard tests were not relevant
Practical and stylish For its few faults, this is a neat piece of BD technology from Samsung. It looks like the kind of lifestyle proposition non-techies might go for, and presents an interesting solution for anyone with a wallmounted flatscreen, particularly if you go for the wireless dongle option. In terms of sheer performance, it falls short of more conventional models and is unlikely to win buyers from Panasonic’s DMP-BD80 (reviewed p78 of this issue). But the smart interface, speedy loading times and undeniably cool form factor are all compelling reasons to take a closer look at this model
Verdict Samsung BD-P4600 £260 Approx Price check: www.techradar.com/592233 Highs: Original styling; slim proportions; fast disc loading; good multimedia management Lows: Average DVD scaling; limited connectivity; no internet features (unlike its competition) Performance: Design: Features:
Overall: