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Camelot Technology Round Table DVD player:
Sound Features But what if you're a fan of Pacific Microsonics' HDCD and you want to play it back correctly? The Round Table has something for you: Flip another switch and you disable the upsampling circuitry and enable the HDCD decoding chip. Play an HDCD and a front-panel light lets you know it's being decoded correctly. To hear HDCD, you'll have to use the analog outputs—unless your receiver or surround processor includes an HDCD decoder, in which case you have a redundant feature. The RT also includes a TosLink optical and an I2S digital output. I2S is a sophisticated low-jitter, sound-enhancing connection that separates the sonic bitstream from the control information (track number, track length, time remaining, etc.). It's compatible only with 24/96 DACs and, of course, with processors that include an I2S bus input jack. Performance I found the Round Table's overall clarity, focus, detail, edge definition, color saturation, and balance to be superb, but thought the Ayre's overall video performance was slightly more 3-dimensional and transparently pure. But it was close. Using patterns from the Avia and Video Essentials test DVDs, I found the resolution (500 horizontal lines), bandwidth, freedom from motion artifacts, and the other specs easily measurable by a lay person, to be just about perfect. I know that measurements don't tell the whole story in audio, and perhaps the same is true with video. In any case, the RT's picture quality was superb. I wished I had a much less expensive progressive-scan player on hand to compare it with, but I didn't.
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