Sharp DV-650U DVD Players

Sharp DV-650U DVD Players 

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-8 of 8  
[Feb 07, 2000]
Alan
Casual Listener

Strength:

Price. Very affordable. Price grabbed my attention and made me buy my first DVD player. One month later I took it back and upgraded to a Toshiba SD2109

Weakness:

Can not turn unit off from the remote. Some of the features on the remote did not work. Picture continually freezed up and stuttered which was very frustrating.

This little machine wooed me into the world of a digital home theatre system. The unit was on sale for $180 US. Soon after, I purchased a full digital dolby home theatre system and big screen TV to go along with it as I became hooked on DVD's (at a cost of $4,000). The Sharp then became the weak link in my system. At inopportune times, and to the disappointment of my guests, the unit would freeze up or stutter (slow motion) which became frustrating and intolerable. I upgraded to a Toshiba SD2109. The Toshiba was only $75 more and came with 5 free DVD's and 13 free DVD rentals from Blockbuster. The Toshiba is definitely a higher quality unit with features such as multiple fast forward and rewind speeds, picture zoom, the ability to turn off the unit via the remote, a bit stream indicator, etc. The Sharp proves that "if the price is too good to be true, it probably is" or that "you get what you pay for".

Similar Products Used:

Toshiba SD2109 was the model that I upgraded to.

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
3
[Nov 11, 2001]
Jane

I was heartened to read other reviews on this site and find out that the problems I have been having with my player are not unique to me. This DVD player is very sensitive to smudges or dust on disks, and as a result, make cleaning of any rented or borrowed disks a must. The player reacts to problems with the disk by freezing. This can usually be resolved by pausing and un-pausing the disk, but usually requires throughly cleaning the disk (since freezing once is usually followed by repeated pauses--very annoying during the key point of a movie).

I got this player (new) at a very good price (

OVERALL
RATING
3
VALUE
RATING
4
[Dec 03, 2001]
John
Audiophile

Strength:

Works sometimes

Weakness:

Usually won't load DVDs that have ANY blemishes. Most rented DVDs don't work or skip the whole time. Freezes in play are contiuous and annoying. My fiance and I both have the same model and they both do the same thing.

You would be better off with $200 worth of dirt.

Similar Products Used:

Pioneer DVD

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
1
[Jan 17, 2002]
Matt
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Sound, Reads CD-R & CD-RW and MP3 CDs.

Weakness:

Video, completely locked up once.

I borrowed this unit for a few days from a friend to test out my Yamaha HTR 5240 reciever. Was not impressed. The very first thing i noticed was when watching The Matrix (wich supposedly has some of the best video on DVD) was compression blocks. Now the thing is that this was clear to see on my 1982 21" tv. Trying it on some better TVs with the video and s-video connections just brought this out more. Especially the making of the matrix where there was 60 FPS video. Disgusting. In the layer change in the DVD (right after morpheus picks up the phone and says "we're in" the unit froze up and it sounded like the little laser thing was trying to move but the grars were just stripping. No buttons would stop this and i had to unplug the unit. When plugging it back in and going to this part it only paused for a second, seems to only happen when you watch it from the begenning. I've seen better video coming from my dreamcast in the intro to ecw anarchy rulz. As for the sound it's perfect but that is not hard as it is only outputting ons and offs.

I hope that this is not what DVD is about and it's just due to poor video processing in this unit. Since this is an inexpensive player in guessing that it is directed towards people with regular TVs (you know, non-progressive scan bubble-screens.) My $160 s-vhs in my opinion has better picture when viewed on a regular TV when taped from a good source.

For thopse of you who are interested i opened it up and it had a computer dvd drive (complete with red, black, and yellow power supply jack and IDE cable)

i gave the value rating 3 stars (fair deal) because if nothing else its nice to have something that will output a PCM (including 48 KHz) signal for 650 mb worh of mp3 s on a CD-RW disc and saying to your friends "yeah i got a DVD player."

overall rating is 2 stars (not completely happy) because of the incredible artifacting in the picture. More than DSS. completely clean unscratched disc if you were wondering. 'Nuff said.

Similar Products Used:

None.

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
3
[Nov 11, 1999]
Brian
Casual Listener

Strength:

Small size of the unit and nice remote.

Weakness:

The remote and the quality of the machine when playing back discs.

Well, I had problems from the start practically. I played a DVD once with no problem. It was the first DVD to be played in the machine. However, everytime after that, the machine had serious artifacts, the video would slow and you would see a tremendous amount of pixelation. It's the worst piece of A/V equipment i have purchases. I have friends that have purchased Sharp products and the build quality and reliablity are extremely poor, but then again, you get what you pay for. I got mine at Costo for $200.00. Now I know why it was so cheap.

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
1
[Nov 16, 1999]
Tony G.
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Compact size, component outs, built in DD decoding

Weakness:

Remote is weak, uses standy instead of power off

I've had much better luck than the other reviewer with my unit. I paid $300 in March for this unit and it has worked pretty well. It does appear to be somewhat sensitive to smudges from the DVDs I've rented. However, I use the Walmart lens cleaner solution and cloth whenever I get freeze ups, and that has never failed to solve this problem. I now do this before I play every rental disc or the discs that my children handle often. I have never gotten video pixelation, only the freezes that coincide with the audio pauses on a dirty disc. You can only power off using the poor quality button on the face of the unit--I'd prefer that the remote turn the unit off instead of placing it in standby mode. The remote has tiny buttons and is non-intuitive.

The midi size chassis (10.5 " wide) allowed me to store the unit in my TV cabinet and not purchase a new rack--major bonus for me. I wish the DD decoder crossover was set at 80 instead of 100 Hz, but for the price it allowed me to put off buying a new receiver until next year. This thing operates whisper quiet compared to the other units I've used. I have a 32" Toshiba with S-Video. It looks very good, but it really shined when I hooked it up to my brother's RPTV via component. The sound is typical high quality DD. I can't evaluate it's DTS performance until I get the new receiver.

If I were buying now, I'd probably get the Proscan with the small chassis (and black tape over the DIVX label). It's far noisier in operation, but less expensive with a better remote. The video performance on my relative small TV was equivilent.

Similar Products Used:

Toshiba SD2109, SD3109, Phillips 850, Sony 300

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
3
[Jan 05, 2000]
Wil
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

DD decoder

Weakness:

picture quality, lockups

This was the first player I've used. I was impressed at first, but started noticing the picture looked rough on a 55" RPTV. After having it a couple months it began having 1-second freezing problems. The worst was while watching Saving Private Ryan (DD) on it for the first time. It froze about 15 times, including a couple times where it needed to be paused, then unpaused before continuing. Completely ruined the experience and decided to get rid of it before the movie was over.

I should note that taking the disc out and wiping it down to make sure it is dust free seemed to help sometimes, but in the case of SPR, it had problems right out of the shrink wrap!

Returned it to Costco for full $299 refund after the Panasonic DVD-A320 came in to replace it. Picture is clear with the Panasonic, and it has yet to lock up even once.

I've had an RCA RC5220P on a different TV for almost as long as the Sharp, and although the build quality, remote, and menus are lacking compared to the Sharp, I have never had even a quarter-second glitch on the RCA.

If you can get a good price on this (I'd say less than $200) and are willing to put up with some problems, it may be a good first player, because of its small size and built in Dolby Digital. For me, I'd rather have a low-feature RCA that plays movies with no problems.

Similar Products Used:

Panasonic DVD-A320, RCA RC5220P

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
3
[Aug 14, 2000]
Steven
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Plays all DVD's, A ton of outputs, DTS + DD decodeding.

Weakness:

Never powers off only sleeps, Problems with DVD if they have finger prints, No -- NO Progresive output.

Well this is a very Honest review with the intent to inform people of good hard fact finding.

First setup is simple with a twist. You can connect it to either your TV, AV unit, A sat dish reciever, or whatever and have it play, only here is the twist.
You need to make sure what you have it setup for is matched in the Menu. Such as the Audio output, Screen Size, and some other features. Also as a extra plus I have the unit running a optical to my AV for perfect 5.1 surround and RGB to my VCR. This works great for my TV only has a Coxial input and that is why I am running this way, but still It works and works great.
Ok next part is about problems. Well after a few days I tried the DVD angle and it did not work and the DVD disk had the feature. To this date after 100+ DVD's with the angel feature it still will not work, Also on note should be the fact that getting some DVD to play can be a pain as the unit will try and load it only to stop or spit it back out. Turns out the DVD everytime had prints on the surface. Another tiny thing to look at is this is not progressive and with progressive being the in thing you might want to keep looking.
Ok here is the great part that makes this a real contender.
First every DVD that I have or rented 300+ different have played from Dineys Oz, Matrix (10x +), Mask, and a host of other DVD that have been posted of not being able to play in higher end units. That makes this a unit to be sure to not forget.
Ok next is the fact that you have so many outputs and the fact they can be used in combo is a great feature. You also have the menu that may be a tad plain is great and offer several features like 5.1 or 2 channel decoading and you need to decided if you want the AV to do the work or the DVD player. You can also have a Aduio out to your AV, TV, and VCR at the same time with all 3 running.
Over all this unit has great benifits, but the problems make up enough to give it a black Eye.

To sum it up with who should buy and who should not.
Anyone looking for a DVD that is not that much into high end stuff or just wants a DVD player that will play ever DVD then this will work wonders. Also first time buyers should make this a first look unit.
Anyone looking for a unit that will play a DVD at higher outputs, Angels, 3 or 5 disk tray should look at some other units.

Similar Products Used:

Non about to upgrade to a Progresive Scan DVD.

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
5
Showing 1-8 of 8  

(C) Copyright 1996-2018. All Rights Reserved.

audioreview.com and the ConsumerReview Network are business units of Invenda Corporation

Other Web Sites in the ConsumerReview Network:

mtbr.com | roadbikereview.com | carreview.com | photographyreview.com | audioreview.com