You have selected a custom search.

You may have noticed that we have changed the look and feel of this latest shootout. If you have not yet read the Guide to the Progressive Scan Shootouts, then please do so before continuing. If you do not read the guide before hand, you may not understand the new system. We have also worked hard to move over the previous shootouts to the new look. You can now view all shootouts at once.

We also recommend you read the latest updates to Part 5 of the DVD Benchmark and the Chroma Upsampling Error.

The Test Results

   Pass    Borderline
   Fail    Not Tested

Player data table:

DVD Player Results
General Deinterlacing Core
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags Weight: 10, From DVD: WHQL, Film Mode 1 3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags Weight: 8, From DVD: WHQL, Film Mode 2 3-2 Cadence, Video Flags Weight: 7, From DVD: More Tales of the City 3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags Weight: 6, From DVD: WHQL, Chapter Break 1 and 2 2-2 Cadence, Film Flags Weight: 5, From DVD: Natural Splendors Chapter 6, Avia Zone Plate Film Mode High Detail Weight: 6, From DVD: Super Speedway Bad Edit Weight: 10, From DVD: Big Lebowski, Making-of Video to Film Transition Weight: 6, From DVD: WHQL, Mixed Mode 1 Recovery Time Weight: 6, From DVD: WHQL, Mixed Mode 1 Incorrect Progressive Flags Weight: 6, From DVD: Apollo 13, Making-of; Galaxy Quest Menu Motion Adaptive Weight: 10, From DVD: Video Essentials, Zone Plate; Sage Pendulum Sync Subtitle to Frames Weight: 2, From DVD: Abyss Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags Weight: 10, From DVD: Toy Story, Chapter 4 Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags Weight: 8, From DVD: Monsters, Inc. Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags Weight: 8, From DVD: Toy Story Main Menu. (3-disc set only) Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP Weight: 5, From DVD: More Tales of the City Video Levels Weight: 8, From DVD: Avia, Horizontal Gray Ramp Blacker-than-Black Weight: 7, From DVD: Video Essentials, PLUGE pattern YC Delay Weight: 10, From DVD: Video Essentials, Bowtie Image Cropping Weight: 4, From DVD: Avia, Pixel Cropping Pattern Layer Change Weight: 4, From DVD: WHQL, Title Roll Responsiveness Weight: 6, From DVD: Avia Menus
DV-59AVi> Auto 2 88 51.254
DVR-57H Auto 86 15934.5
DV-59AVi> Auto 2 80 51.254
DV-59AVi> Auto 1 76 1.254
DV-79AVi> Auto 2 69 1.54
DV-59AVi> Auto 1 69 1.254
DV-59AVi> Pure C> 65 1.254
DV-59AVi> Pure C> 57 51.254
DV-79AVi> Pure C> 53 1.54
DV-79AVi> Auto 1 53 1.54
DV-47Ai Auto1 53 611.253
DV-59AVi> Pure C> 51 1.254
DV-59AVi> Pure C> 44 1.254
DV-37 Auto 39 27232.5
DV-38A Auto 38 3731422.5
DV-45A Auto 34 211.53
DV-79AVi> Pure C> 34 1.54
Display Results
General Deinterlacing Core
Pro-510 Advanc> 87 35


Notes on individual players:

Divider

Pioneer Elite - DV-59AVi

MPEG Maker: Mitsubishi
MPEG Model: unknown
Deinterlacer Maker: Pure Cinema Progressive
Deinterlacer Model:
   
MSRP: $1600.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

DV-59AVi (HDMI) - Auto 2

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
YC Delay
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP

DV-59AVi (Component) - Auto 2

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Image Cropping
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay

DV-59AVi (HDMI) - Auto 1

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
YC Delay
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Incorrect Progressive Flags

DV-59AVi (Component) - Auto 1

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Image Cropping
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Incorrect Progressive Flags

DV-59AVi (HDMI) - Pure Cinema On

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
YC Delay
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Bad Edit
Incorrect Progressive Flags

DV-59AVi (Component) - Pure Cinema On

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Image Cropping
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Bad Edit
Incorrect Progressive Flags

DV-59AVi (HDMI) - Pure Cinema Off

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
YC Delay
Image Cropping
Bad Edit
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time

DV-59AVi (Component) - Pure Cinema Off

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Sync Subtitle to Frames
Bad Edit
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Image Cropping
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time

This is the second go around for the Pioneer Elite 59AVi in our benchmark. I tested the player last year, and I liked it so much, it received our Best of Award for 2004 in the DVD player category. A short while after that, rumors started spreading around the net that Pioneer released an updated firmware revision for the player which eliminated some of the issues we reported on. I spoke with Pioneer about it, and they sent me a brand new player to test. We also received a 59TXi receiver and you will be seeing full reviews of both products here at Secrets.

So the big question is, did anything change? Is this version any better than before? Well the answer is no. I ran into the same issues this time around that I did last time. But it still remains one of the top players on the market today.

The 59AVi is based on a Mitsubishi MPEG decoder and uses Pioneer’s proprietary Pure Cinema Progressive de-interlacing solution. We have not been real big fans of this solution in the past, but this new version is a huge step up from past players.

The Elite 59AVi has four different progressive modes to chose from; Auto 1, Auto 2, Pure Cinema On and Pure Cinema Off. Just like the last time we tested this player, we recommend Auto 2. This mode passed all of our tests, including 2-2 and 3-2 Chapter breaks. It also has a very fast recovery time when transitioning between film and video, and vice versa.

Auto 1 does quite a good job as well but had more difficulty with video based material compared to Auto 2. Neither mode does as well as a DCDi based Faroudja solution with video material, and jaggies were quite evident with a few different video clips I had on hand to compare. But Pioneer doesn’t have any issues with macroblocking like Faroudja-based players do.

The core side of the player has some obvious differences between component and HDMI. HDMI is definitely the preferred connection with this player. There is no pixel cropping at all via HDMI, and Y/C delay is perfect. This player also correctly outputs Studio RGB levels via HDMI even when converting to DVI. Another huge plus is support for 480i via HDMI, making this an excellent candidate for future HDMI-based video processors. This is especially so, since the 59AVi also supports iLink for high resolution audio and movie soundtracks.

The component side doesn’t fair near as well. There is over a full pixel of Y/C delay at 480p. The 59AVi has a chroma delay adjustment in its video setup menu, but it only allows integer pixel increments which is too large to fix the problem. The player also clips a combined 7 pixels from the right and left side of the image via component. The component video white level is at the edge of our acceptable standard and measures in at 102 IRE.

One of the other big drawbacks of Pioneer players in the past has been chroma issues. This player is really no exception, but the main 3-2 and video based CUE errors are gone. But with material that uses an alternating 3-2 cadence (most of the Disney animated DVDs), you will see a flickering problem in solid colors. The Pioneer solution also doesn’t have a chroma filter for 4:2:0 ICP, while the Faroudja, HQV, and DVDO solutions do have this.

In terms of responsiveness, the Pioneer Elite is a bit above average. Menu navigation and chapter skips are pretty fast and never an issue. The layer change is a tad sluggish and measures a bit over a full second. The user interface itself is quite good though and offers plenty of tweakability and lots of set-up modes for video performance.

Summary: I would still rate the Pioneer 59AVi as one of the best DVD players on the market today at any price point. It is also one to consider for use as a total digital transport (universal player) in the months to come. With more and more HDMI-based video processors coming out in the next year, this is a fine player to use with them. I look forward to seeing if Pioneer has a successor for this player at CEDIA-2005.

Video Frequency Response
Pioneer Elite

Divider

Pioneer Elite - DVR-57H

MPEG Maker: unknown
MPEG Model: unknown
Deinterlacer Maker: Faroudja
Deinterlacer Model: FLI-2200
   
MSRP: $1800.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

DVR-57H - Auto

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
Blacker-than-Black
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Recovery Time
Layer Change
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Video Levels
YC Delay

Pioneer surprised a few of us this year with their new DVD player, the DVR-57H. This player not only features progressive playback, but record ability and a built-in TiVo to boot! This way you can archive your TV shows all in one player.

What is real nice about this player is that it has Faroudja DCDi processing. This player also features their new MPEG decoder that does not have the chroma upsampling error (CUE) long associated with their other players.

The player does not feature DVD-A or SACD support as most of their other Elite line does.

The player did have some issues with subtitles. It is also cropping quite a bit of the image with 8 pixels on top and 2 on bottom. This player also had one of the slowest layer changes, coming in at about 3 seconds.

Another caveat is the player’s excessive start-up time when you plug it in. It takes several minutes for the player to power up to a useable state. For those that own TiVo's, this is normal behavior. The menus were okay, although a bit limited, and the remote was more suited to the TiVo than the DVD portion of the player. The player also produces a loud noise that was evident every time I used the remote.

Some pluses were the player’s very speedy response when navigating and chapter skipping. Also, the inclusion of the Faroudja processing is definitely a habit I would like to see Pioneer get into.

Divider

Pioneer Elite - DV-79AVi Universal DVD Player

MPEG Maker: Unknown
MPEG Model: Unknown
Deinterlacer Maker: Pioneer
Deinterlacer Model: Pure Cinema Progressive
   
MSRP: $1000.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

DV-79AVi Universal DVD Player (HDMI) - Auto 2

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
Bad Edit

DV-79AVi Universal DVD Player (HDMI) - Pure Cinema On

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Bad Edit
Incorrect Progressive Flags

DV-79AVi Universal DVD Player (HDMI) - Auto 1

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Bad Edit
Incorrect Progressive Flags

DV-79AVi Universal DVD Player (HDMI) - Pure Cinema Off

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time

For anyone who missed my last benchmark of a Pioneer Elite DVD player (DV-59AVi), let’s just say I did a big turn around in my overall opinion of Pioneer’s flagship DVD players. Their past offerings left a lot to be desired, and even worse, there are a lot of companies out there using them as a starting point for their platforms with little or no improvement in the video processing department.

The new DV-79AVi replaces the 59AVi in the line-up and includes some new features that were lacking in the 59AVi, namely, support for HDMI v1.1 which brings DVD-Audio and high resolution multi-channel PCM support over HDMI. The Pioneer line already offered a digital interconnect for high resolution material via Firewire, but this is only useful if you have a processor or receiver that supports it. Most of Pioneer’s Elite line has support, but many surround sound processors out there don’t. I still haven’t figured out why companies don’t generally offer this feature on their surround sound processors since this represents state of the art technology.

The 79Avi also improves on the 59AVi in the build and looks department. While it still doesn’t have the overall build integrity of players like Onkyo’s SP-1000 or Denon’s DVD 5910, it is by far the best looking and heftiest player in the Pioneer Elite line. The 79AVi is available in both silver and black and features a very elegant face and a well rounded back panel that compliments just about every kind of video and audio connection on the market today.

When I tested the 59AVi, I was extremely impressed with how much Pioneer had improved its proprietary Pure Cinema video processing. Their de-interlacing capability was improved to the point of being almost a match for the popular Faroudja and Silicon Image solutions. The 79AVi doesn’t seem to be exactly the same as the 59AVi and actually falls behind slightly, which was surprising to say the least.

When I first started testing the 79AVi, I immediately noticed a problem that I had never seen in a DVD player before. For our cadence testing, we use several test patterns from Microsoft’s Hardware Quality Labs DVD. These test patterns consist of a vertical and horizontal resolution wedge revolving in a clockwise motion and have different progressive flags at different points along the circle. When I began the tests, I immediately started to see some moiré in the vertical resolution wedge as the pattern went near the 90 degree mark in the circle. As the wedge continued on, it essentially came out of film mode and all vertical resolution was lost until about 240 degrees. The weirdest thing about it was, the wedge wasn’t dropping out of film mode consistently but rather fading in and out at different points. I tried this test in all of the different de-interlacing modes, and each one showed the same thing (except Pure Cinema Off which doesn’t ever lock into film mode anyway). In further investigation, I popped in AVIA Pro and used their cadence tests to see how the player would react. Again, I was treated to some new issues that I couldn’t reproduce with any other player or video processor I had on hand. As the resolution wedges on the AVIA Pro pattern moved toward the right side of the screen, there was some obvious interference going on in the extreme right side of the wedge. As the wedge moved faster, it got worse, and the problem faded in and out at a very specific point. When the pattern switched to moving vertically the player would not hold horizontal resolution at all. This problem went away completely if I set the HDMI output to 480i and used an outboard video processor, confirming that this was indeed an issue with Pioneer’s internal video processing.

I commented on this at the popular Audio/Video Science Forum and got some interesting reports back. Dale Adams of Anchor Bay Technologies (creators of DVDO) offered some suggestions of what might be wrong. He thought it might be a high detail issue. With this infomation, I went back and tried more tests using some other test patterns I had on hand. The player seemed to do fine with the familiar stuff like the race car sequence from Super Speedway. I also tried a clip from The Killer that is known for high detail issues, and the player did fine. I then moved on to a small clip from Gladiator that is a panning sequence over the city of Rome. This scene is a bit of a torture test for a lot of DVD players. Sure enough, the 79AVi showed obvious issues, including moiré as well as digital artifacts that I had never seen before.

Shortly after this, a member of the AVS forum offered to bring his player over to my house to ensure that the problem wasn’t in fact a defective player. His player showed the exact same issues. A few of the other members of AVS started experimenting with different settings over the next few days while I was off doing other things. One of the members found that the artifacts seemed to go away if he set Pioneer’s Progressive Motion setting to “Slow”. When I got the player hooked up the next time, I tried this out and sure enough, it fixed the problem. I didn’t see any more issues with the revolving wedge patterns and the digital artifacts in the Gladiator sequence disappeared. The player still has issues with vertical motion with high detail though. This was readily apparent with the test patterns on AVIA Pro as well as the roof tops with the Gladiator sequence. I re-checked these scenes with my reference Denon DVD-5910, and it didn’t have any problems with these tests.

Unfortunately, I do not have access to a DV-59AVi anymore to see if it has the same artifacts. I was not using AVIA Pro at the time I was testing the 59AVi, so there really isn’t any way that I would have seen the same things when I tested it.

So, as of right now I recommend that anyone using this player set the progressive motion setting to “Slow” to ensure that you won’t run into the above mentioned problems. This is only a stop gap in my opinion and I hope that Pioneer will look into the issue and resolve it, as it was not a problem with the previously tested 59AVi, or any other player I’ve tested for that matter.

Moving on from that to our typical batch of tests, the 79AVi did quite well. Like the 59AVi, I recommend using the Auto 2 setting for progressive playback regardless of the output or resolution used. This mode passes all of our tests with the exception of our “Bad Edit” test. For some reason, I could not get this player to pass that test regardless of the de-interlacing mode. This was another peculiar issue, since the 59AVi passed this test.

The core performance of this player was a bit of a mixed bag. The 79AVi offers several output resolutions using its HDMI output, including 480i, 480p, 720p, and 1080i. The inclusion of 480i makes this player a likely candidate as a digital transport for a standalone video processor that may offer better performance. Some of the key things to look for when shopping for a digital transport are pixel cropping, CUE performance, and usability (speed of navigation and layer change). You also want to be sure the player doesn’t have any Y/C delay issues. Unfortunately the 79AVi has issues in almost all of these categories.

Using the chroma test patterns from the newest Microsoft test disc (Test Annex 3), the player did not pass 3 of the 4 tests. When I fed it an alternating 3-2 cadence pattern, there was obvious flickering in the chroma channels that lends to a distracting image that seems very unstable. Moving on to the 2-2 test pattern revealed a slight amount of CUE issues that were verified using the DVDO VP-30 video processor. Using its AutoCUE-C™ feature, I could see a slight amount of banding in the pattern disappear and re-appear as I toggled the feature off and on. While the issue is only minor in comparison to Pioneer’s former players, it was still there. Moving on to the 4:2:0 ICP test, the image looked quite bad. It had a very interlaced look to it, with all of the red displaying obvious tearing with both still images and motion. DVDO’s chroma correction feature did fix the 2-2 issue, but the ICP performance was so bad that the DVDO couldn’t mask the entire artifact. Given how good the chroma filtering is in the DVDO, I don’t expect any other processor out there to do any better. This should be taken into consideration for those who are sensitive to these visible problems.

Using both the HDMI and component video outputs the 79AVi suffers from about 1-pixel of Y/C delay. Pioneer has included an adjustment for chroma delay, but it adjusts in almost 2-pixel increments which is not nearly fine enough to help with this issue. The player doesn’t really have any issues with pixel cropping though. All of the resolutions showed 2-pixels missing from the bottom of the image and while no pixel cropping at all is preferred, this would still be out of the active frame with most material.

The 79AVi passes below black information using its component output, but its default white level is too high and measured in at 103 IRE. The HDMI output has four different selections for color space if you are using the HDMI output to an HDMI display, and two different options if you connect to a DVI-based display. On the HDMI side, you have RBG, Full Range RGB, Component (4:4:4 YCbCr), and 12-bit Component (4:2:2 YCbCr). If you connect to a DVI display, you can only select the two RGB options. All of these selections offer the correct Studio RGB levels with black at digital 16 and white at digital 235, preserving the full dynamic range of the intended video signal, except Full Range RGB. This mode uses the PC RGB levels moving black to digital 0 and white to digital 255. This clips the head and toe room of the video signal and does not preserve its intended dynamic range.

From a usability standpoint the 79AVi is slightly above average. The player navigates pretty quickly but can be a tad sluggish in its set-up menus. Menu navigation is good though, as are load times. The layer change is too slow in my opinion, and clocked in at roughly 1.5 seconds using our high bit rate test. I would prefer to see player’s measure in at less than a second or even better seamlessly.

In terms of features, the 79AVi is one of the best players out there. The audio suite is excellent, with full support of iLink, HDMI 1.1, DVD-Audio, and SACD. This is one of only a handful of players on the market right now offering these features. The audio set-up options are also quite good, but the player lacks the option to do time alignment for DSD-based material. This is unfortunate, since time alignment is an important feature for multi-channel playback. Since most people don’t have the flexibility to place all of their speakers equidistant from the main listening position, the player must compensate for the differences in placement so that phase is accurate. Most players require the DSD information to be converted to PCM for this application, but Pioneer does not allow for this. This is really the only drawback that I could see on the audio side. Keep in mind though, that if you are using the Firewire output for SACD, the receiver or processor may offer time alignment for the signal, which would make this a non-issue.

Conclusions

I must say that I was a bit more impressed with the Pioneer Elite 59AVi than the 79AVi, overall. The 79AVi does offer some new features that I was happy to see (10 bit processing, HDMI v1.1 support), but I think the player took a bit of a step backwards in terms of video processing performance and core performance. If you already own the 59AVi, I would have to suggest sticking with it if you are getting anxious to upgrade. If you are in the market for a new player and have these two in mind you should consider the pros and cons of both before deciding. Some of the things I’ve mentioned here won’t immediately pop out at you, and some people may not even notice them. In general, the 79AVi is still an excellent DVD player, but with just a bit of fine tuning, Pioneer could have achieved an almost best-in-class rating. Hopefully, they will do some testing and provide a firmware update. If they do, you can be sure we will re-test the player and report on it.

Video Frequency Response
Pioneer Elite

Divider

Pioneer Elite - DV-47Ai

MPEG Maker: Mitsubishi
MPEG Model: Unknown
Deinterlacer Maker: Pioneer
Deinterlacer Model: Unknown
   
MSRP: $1199.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

DV-47Ai - Auto1

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Video to Film Transition
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
YC Delay
Image Cropping
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Bad Edit
Incorrect Progressive Flags

This is Pioneer's flagship universal (SACD & DVD-A) player.

Deinterlacing

Pioneer has appeared to make some improvements with their deinterlacing compared to the previous 47A. It no longer combs on subtitles and it is able to deal with encoding errors on subtitles.

They also appear to have fixed the strange combing problem on the Galaxy Quest "bonus features" menu. At least we were not able to reproduce it on any of the universal players based on the Pioneer electronics.

But in general, this suffers from the same basic problems that most flag readers have, and some that most don't have. It has a cadence analysis algorithm, so it does OK on film material that is flagged as video, but it failed our bad edit test with the worst score in the shootout (equaled only by the other players based on the Pioneer design).

The Basics

The bad news is that the MPEG decoder still suffers from the Chroma Upsampling Error. It appears to be just as bad as previous Pioneer players. Pioneer players are on the severe end of the Chroma Upsampling Error scale.

The white level on this player appeared to be pretty dead on and the over all frequency response also appeared to be pretty good. The 47Ai is also capable of passing below black picture information.

The frequency response on this player is nice and flat with a small roll-off at 10 MHz.

The component timing is outside of spec. While you can fix level differences among players with the picture controls, there is virtually nothing you can really do with the timings of the component signal. While there is a YC delay adjustment in the menus, it is too coarse to correct the problem. One option is to get different lengths of cable for each video signal (Y, Pb, and Pr) but that has its own set of problems.

The layer change takes around 1.25 seconds to complete under the worst case scenario. We rated the overall response time of the player a 3, which is a hair more responsive that the previous DV-47A.

There are 3 lines cropped from the bottom of the image. This is unacceptable in our opinion. There is no technical reason to crop the top or bottom of the image.

The most positive thing we can say about this player is that it's the best Pioneer player we've looked at. Sadly, that really isn't enough. This player should be better, given its price and its THX certification. Given that you can now get a universal SACD/DVD-A player from Yamaha with excellent video, we can't recommend this player at all.

Video Frequency Response
Pioneer Elite

Divider

Pioneer Elite - DV-37

MPEG Maker: Mitsubishi
MPEG Model: Unknown
Deinterlacer Maker: Pioneer
Deinterlacer Model: Unknown
   
MSRP: $1000.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

DV-37 - Auto

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Blacker-than-Black
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Video Levels

This player has some very nice features, and a much improved remote compared to earlier models. It also is an improvement on the previous elite models, the DV-09 and DV-05. Unlike them, the DV-37 has no significant chroma delay, and the ringing is improved. That said, we were still disappointed with this player. It has the worst chroma upsampling artifact of any of the players reviewed. We couldn’t imagine how someone could watch "Toy Story" on this player and not notice the jagged streaks on almost every red object in the movie. And, we noticed the problem on almost every movie we used in the testing, even when we weren’t looking for the problem. The red streaks were that bad.

The deinterlacing performance was not very good either. It's a flag-reading player, and like every other flag-reading player in the showdown, the Pioneer does fine when it’s fed perfect material with perfect flags. (As we mentioned, this is one reason you see so many glowing reviews of players by other magazines. They are using terrific DVDs to review them. Most players will get a good report as such. It is really necessary to test them with difficult DVDs to discover the true capabilities of players.) But when the flags are wrong, the DV-37 is not up to the task. The player clearly uses the flags on the disc to make decisions, so it combed on many of the tests with bad or unusual flags. It also dropped to video mode when it didn’t need to. Interestingly, the player combed in places that no other player combed, even other players that use the flags, for example the film that plays behind the “Special Features” menu in "Galaxy Quest".

The ringing on this player isn’t as bad as the DV-09, but it’s still too high, well above average for this group. Turning all detail and sharpness settings down on the player made the problem slightly better, but even after every setting was at zero, the player still had worse ringing problems than any other player in the showdown.

While looking at discs with this player, we saw a strange problem with the WHQL credits roll -- it looked like it was blocky and flickering. All the players had minor flicker problems here, but the DV-37 was a whole order of magnitude worse.

Divider

Pioneer Elite - DV-38A

MPEG Maker: Mitsubishi
MPEG Model:
Deinterlacer Maker: Pioneer
Deinterlacer Model:
   
MSRP: $1800.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

DV-38A - Auto

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Blacker-than-Black
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Recovery Time
Motion Adaptive
Image Cropping
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
Video Levels
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Incorrect Progressive Flags

This is the fancier sibling of the DV-37 we reviewed in the last shootout, and its video performance was essentially identical. The deinterlacing performance was poor, even for a flag-reading player, and its chroma bug is fairly bad. There was more ringing on this player than on most of the others we looked at. This gives the image a very sharp crisp look that so many people are after. This works ok on a CRT, but is distracting on a digital display like the Sony 10HT we used.

On the plus side, the DV-38A (like the DV-37) does have motion-adaptive video deinterlacing, which puts it ahead of most of the pack when watching video material. But while good video deinterlacing is a great thing, and much to be desired, it's the film deinterlacing that you pay good money for a progressive player for. And here the Pioneer does not do well. It has worse bad-edit detection than any of the players in the shootout (7 combs on Big Lebowski, for example), and combed in places that no other player did.

The player has an interesting control that allows you to adjust "Pure Progressive" from "fast" to "slow," which actually seems to be adjusting the balance between temporal and spatial interpolation in the video deinterlacing algorithms. We found this fascinating, but largely worthless to the end user.

Frankly, for this much money, Pioneer could do much, much better. As you'll see when you read the write-up for the Pioneer Elite 510 TV, clearly Pioneer has a good quality deinterlacing chipset. We don't understand why they didn't use it for this player.

Video Frequency Response
Pioneer Elite

Divider

Pioneer Elite - DV-45A

MPEG Maker: Mitsubishi
MPEG Model: Unknown
Deinterlacer Maker: Pioneer
Deinterlacer Model: Unknown
   
MSRP: $700.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

DV-45A - Auto

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
Blacker-than-Black
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Recovery Time
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
Video Levels
YC Delay
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive

The Pioneer 45A is a "universal" player, which means that in addition to DVD Video, it also plays DVD Audio and SACD discs. We didn't review the audio features of the player.

Deinterlacing

We were amazed to find that this player is a step backward in deinterlacing performance from the DV-37 and DV-38A (which didn't have the best deinterlacing to begin with). The 45A appears to be a pure flag reader, with none of the cadence analysis the 47Ai has. What is even more surprising is that this player does not even have motion-adaptive video deinterlacing, which all of the Pioneer progressive players have had (with the exception of the 434, which doesn't deserve to be called progressive).

The Basics

Like all Pioneer players thus far, the 45A suffers from the Chroma Upsampling Error, and it's very visible. Enough said.

The white level is low on this player at 96.88 IRE. There really is no valid reason for the levels being this low. The video encoders used by Pioneer all come from Analog Devices and can be set pretty close to perfect, at least within the +/- 2 IRE window we use for ranking. You may need to bring contrast up when using this player.

The frequency response in this player is hotter than any other player. It looks like they have really emphasized the mid band frequencies. At first glance, this will make the 45A appear sharper than other players. Once you have properly adjusted the sharpness control on your display, this difference will go away.

The component timing is outside of spec. The 45A does reproduce blacker than black picture information, which is at least one nice thing we can say about the player.

There was 1 sample cropped from the left and 3 from the right, which we consider acceptable.

We get accused of being biased against Pioneer constantly, which we're not. Many of us at Secrets of Home Theater & Hi Fi are fans of many Pioneer products, including their audio gear, TVs, and laserdisc players. But it's hard to be fans of their DVD players when they produce players like this. It's not a terrible player, but given that several cheaper players are better overall, we just can't recommend this one, at least based on progressive video quality.

Video Frequency Response
Pioneer Elite

Divider

Pioneer Elite - Pro-510

MPEG Maker: N/A
MPEG Model: N/A
Deinterlacer Maker: Pioneer
Deinterlacer Model: Unknown
   
MSRP: $6300.00
Website: http://www.pioneerelectronics.com

Pro-510 - Advanced

Passed Borderline Failed Not Tested
3-2 Cadence, Film Flags
3-2 Cadence, Alt. Flags
3-2 Cadence, Video Flags
3-2 Cadence, Mixed Flags
2-2 Cadence, Film Flags
Film Mode High Detail
Bad Edit
Video to Film Transition
Incorrect Progressive Flags
Motion Adaptive
Chroma, 4:2:0 ICP
Recovery Time
Layer Change
Responsiveness
Chroma, 3-2 Film Flags
Chroma, 3-2 Alt. Flags
Chroma, 2-2 Film Flags
Video Levels
Blacker-than-Black
YC Delay
Image Cropping
Sync Subtitle to Frames

This is a TV rather than a DVD player, but we included it in our deinterlacing tests because it's often touted as having an excellent deinterlacer, so good in fact that there's no need to use a progressive DVD player with it. We wanted to put that assertion to the test. We did all our tests in the factory default deinterlacing mode, labeled "advanced". We found that the "standard" mode was significantly worse, and we can't imagine why they included it.

What we found is that essentially, the reports are true. The deinterlacing on the Elite is excellent, in fact better than most progressive players. Its bad-edit detection is excellent, and it has a fine motion-adaptive video deinterlacer. The one area it didn't do as well in was recovery time from video to film mode. It tends to drop into video mode fairly quickly, and takes a relatively long time to get back to film mode. And because it doesn't have anything like Sage's DCDi, the change to video mode is often fairly noticeable.

As to whether you don't need a progressive player with this TV, that's hard to say. The Sage and Silicon Image based players were better at deinterlacing, though not by a huge margin. Perhaps more importantly, we did notice the resolution loss when using the internal deinterlacer, because the signal must be converted an extra time from analog to digital, deinterlaced, then converted back to analog. With an external player, the deinterlacing is done before the signal is ever converted to analog, so there is no resolution loss.

It's probably not worth getting a lower-end progressive player like a Genesis or Mediamatics-based player to mate with this TV. But if you want the best quality possible, adding a progressive player will make a small but worthwhile difference.

While we are not actually reviewing the TV at this point, it is worth noting that this TV has some of the most pronounced ringing we have ever seen in a consumer display device. We did disconnect SVM (Scan Velocity Modulation) and we pulled down the service mode sharpness adjustment from 0 to -128.

(Note: we didn't do the Abyss test on the Elite TV because that test wasn't yet on the list when we did the testing of the Elite, and we were unable to get the unit back to do that test.)