Sumvision Phoenix Premium HDMI DVD/DivX Player Reviews

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Sumvision Phoenix Premium HDMI DVD/DivX Player
★★★☆☆
2.6
27.0% of users recommend this
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“So I wanted to watch my DVD movies upscaled especially...”

★★★★☆

written by garchunlee on 13/09/2008

So I wanted to watch my DVD movies upscaled especially since my region 3 House of Flying Daggers won ' t work in my Playstation 3. I had a few DVD players in the past(Yamada 6600 http://www.reviewcentre.com/review147484.html Ronin P80L http://www.reviewcentre.com/review34731.html). I already had a pretty good DVD player (Peekton 6006 DVD player) which handled DVD ' s/DivX very competently , but no HDMI/upscaling.

I was also getting sick of burning disks all the time, so when I saw the Sumvision DVD player at £35 I snapped it up straight away.

This DVD player is packed with features, apart from the 5.1 audio connectivity and scart it has HDMI out (not 1.3) it has a SD card reader which has been tested with 2GB SD cards which will read multi format videos like DivX 3/4/5, MPEG2, Xvid, and SVCD. It also has a USB port which I used a SD card reader and an external hard drive full of video and audio files which were recognised but I have yet to use a multi-card reader. Plus the unit itself is tiny, being slightly larger than a portable DVD player.

Connecting the unit up to my LG 32LT75 (http://www.reviewcentre.com/review333343.html) via a standard HDMI cable a placed a copy of ' Clerks 2 ' and I noticed immediately that the picture did not seem quiet right. I altered the upscaling setting from auto to 720p/1080i/1080p which didn ' t seem to make much difference. Indeed when I placed the disk into my Playstation 3 you immediately noted difference in colour, contrast and general richness in picture quality compared to the Sumvision unit which made the picture look flat and lifeless.

Audio is no different to other the other units I have had with different base and treble settings to give a lively and vibrant audio which as well as comprising of 5.1 includes optical out.

JPEG viewing is ok until it has to scan anything higher than 5MP then it becomes very slow taking about 20 seconds to scan a JPEG, plus being very pixelated as well

With almost all DVD/DivX players when you stop the video half way you have to watch the video from the beginning again. One unique aspect of this unit is its ability to stop a DivX video part way and restart in the same place that you stopped at. This is true even when you switch the unit off or you start watching something else.

Another bonus is the ability to watch multi-region DVD ' s without any remote hackz.

Conclusion

I only purchased this unit so I could watch some of my region 1 & 3 DVD ' s, but throwing the fact that it can read SD cards and has a USB port is a great bonus as well.

Sadly it is let down by the video quality which is mediocre at best. I may not have been so hard in this review if it wasn ' t for the fact that the Playstation 3 performs by far much better video quality playback. I would not recommend this as a main DVD player, but as a second unit and at £30- £40 it won ' t break the bank.

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Garchunlee's Response to garchunlee's Review

Written on: 23/09/2008

Note
<br/>
<br/>After extensively altering the settings on the DVD player I finally get the unit to perform well. This is how I did it:
<br/>
<br/>Go into Setup > Video > Smart Picture > Dynamic and a sub menu appears. Take the contrast to 15 and colour to 9. Plus change the HD resolution from Auto to 1080p and suddenly you get a bright, vibrant picture with deep rich colours in comparison with the auto settings.
<br/>
<br/>Using The Matrix as my test video the picture reproduction is deep with altering black levels which were well reproduced with no motion blurring during fast scenes alter the picture was slightly grainer than using the Playstation 3, but otherwise it is a solid picture production.
<br/>
<br/>This is the first time I have had to reverse my recommendation for any product, but I would recommend this product to others
<br/>

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“We have a 32inch Samsung HD ready LCD TV that is about...”

★★★★☆

written by smiler03 on 30/07/2008

We have a 32inch Samsung HD ready LCD TV that is about two years old. This DVD upscales the picture from ordinary DVDs to the best picture quality that your television can support, so you should notice an improvement in the picture quality compared to a standard DVD player. Note that you MUST use an HDMI cable to benefit from this upscaling. I've seen reviews where people are connected by scart lead and say they can see the difference, if this is the case it's NOT because the picture has been upscaled. We followed the setup instructions in the quite frankly useless instruction manual, The website http://www.sumvision.com.cn is even more useless as it does not even have the manual on the site. We also had our Samsung's menu to deal with. In theory with an HDMI connection you don't need any other connection between your TV and the Sumvision as the HDMI cable carries sound and vision. There is no HDMI lead in the box (well this is tremendously good value already) but there is a scart lead and phone jacks for sound and video, I plugged in the phono jacks AND the HMDI cable. I also used a digital coaxial cable to connect the box to our 5.1 surround sound system which works perfectly). There is also an optical sound connection but mine is already in use by my SKY box.

Everything worked fine straightaway but I was doubtful if any upscaling was going on. I then unplugged the phono jacks and totally lost the picture, the HDMI cable wasn't in use at all! Our Samsung kept telling us there was no HDMI signal. Having tried every combination in the settings with no joy, I reverted to connecting the Sumvision to our brand new smaller Cyberdene HD ready TV. This too initially didn't appear to work so I tried another HDMI cable and still nothing. By sheer fluke at some point the TV flashed up something like 572p, which indicated an upscaled picture, and it was a VERY sharp picture. However I couldn't get this back with sound so I switched the Sumvision on and off.

Miracles!! The Sumvsion HD picture and sound appeared all on their own without any intervention at all. I repeated this a few times and it was consistent. It let me upscale to 1080i but without sound, I believe this is beyond the specification of this £199 TV/DVD machine so I was happy enough with the noticeable improvement I had already seen.

Anyway, back to the Samsung. I tried the same thing again, i.e. the Sumvision connected to the TV with only the HDMI cable. The TV was happily showing SKY TV when I turned on the DVD, Bingo!! An upscaled DVD picture. This is reminiscent of Scart leads and the pin 8 feature whereby the connected box sends a signal to the TV saying "Hello, I'm Here!!" so the TV switches itself over automatically.

I haven't had time to try the many formats that this box supports, including USB devices like memory sticks and external USB hard drives but I have read many reviews which just concentrate on those features and it seems to be very capable. One thing to note is that many eBay sellers sell it as DivX compatible but according to one reviewer it isn't. The manual is so poor that the only reference to the front mounted USB port is in a diagram telling you what it is, not how to use it! See reviews/forums for help on this but I know that the "goto" button is used. The manufacturer only claims the following formats, but bear in mind they haven't even written a proper manual for such a complicated and capable machine so it might be even more capable than they claim.

DVD, DVD+/-R, DVD+/-RW, CD R, CD RW, CD Audio/Video, MPEG4, MP3, JPEG, Xvid

I have also read and seen reviews/websites where "B" grade boxes are available, ie previously opened and returned as dead to the supplier. Given my introduction to this machine I can hardly say I'm surprised.

You might want to consider the Philips DVDR3480 DVD Player Recorder. They are more expensive than the Sumvision. I spotted a new one go for £42 on eBay but that is unusual. This is a Recorder too from a far better known manufacturer with a proper website with a downloadable manual etc. It is also officially DivX Ultra certified. For those of you who have no idea what this is, it is a popular format for video downloads. DivX can allegedly compress an ordinary DVD onto a CD. I wish I'd bought one of these, size isn't everything as they say!

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Asked by Airtype on 15th April 2020 Report this content
I don’t have any colour on my dvd it’s showing in black n white it is fixed to a scart lead.  Can anyone help? Thanks

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Asked by jeanr56 on 6th July 2014 Report this content
How does the USB work?

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Asked by Glbennett1982 on 26th March 2014 Report this content
How do I play a film using a USB?

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