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LG BH100 Reviewed
Written by Luck Kanthatham   
Monday, 29 January 2007

LG BH100

[Now updated with video] The LG BH100 is the first hi-def to be able to support both Blu-ray Disc and HD-DVD formats. But at $1199, is it worth the steep price?

In the late 70's, early 80's, there was a new “IT” consumer electronic device in town. Not only can you record your favorite TV shows but it also let you watch all kinds of Hollywood movies in the convenience of your own home. That device was the video cassette recorder or VCR, for short. The main problem with this “IT” device was that it came in two incompatible formats: VHS (introduced by JVC) and Betamax (introduced by Sony). The consumers were torn between the two formats. Should they go with the Betamax format, which offered superior video quality but with a shorter recording time? Or should they go with the VHS format for its inferior video quality but a longer recording time. In the end, the VHS format won the format war of the early 80's.

Fast forward to the modern day consumer electronics arena, consumers are now faced with another format war: Blu-ray Disc vs. HD-DVD. Both formats offer far superior video and audio quality than the current DVD format. However, the Blu-ray Disc technology offers higher capacity storage. For more information on the two formats, we 'd like to refer you to our two friends: “goo” and 'gle”.

As an attempt to bring peace to the format war (or to take money from our wallets), LG has introduced the first player that could play both hi-def formats: the LG BH100. It is also known as the “Super Multi Blue Player”. Err.. yes. One of these days we will dedicate an entire article on the science of LG naming scheme. At least for the model number BH100, we think the “B” stands for Blu-ray Disc, “H” stands for HD-DVD and the 100 is the starting point of other models to come: BH200, BH300 and so on.

Overview

One look at the BH100 and you know that LG opted for function over form on this player. Its black boxy exterior reminds us of “IT” device of the early 80's. The high-gloss finish in front of player acts as a diversion to the player's rather dull-looking shape. It is nowhere nearly as “sexy” as our resident Blu-ray Disc player: the Samsung BD-P1000. It has a big Blu-ray Disc logo etched on top letting you know that it is Blu-ray Disc-certified. Toward the front-top lies the touch-sensitive control buttons that light up when the player is turned on.

When touched, these buttons light up and emit a “twink” sound effect to give the user an audio feedback; a nice touch. The player can play Blu-ray Discs, HD-DVDs and DVDs (including all the record-able variants). It employs two laser diodes: one for regular DVDs and the other for HD-DVD/Blu-ray Discs. However, it does not play CDs. Maybe they just couldn't find room to fit a third laser diode in there. The playback is at 25 – 30 frames per second. Also, it does not support HD-DVD's interactive menu feature (HDi). This means that advanced features on some HD-DVDs would not be accessible via the player's menu system.

The BH100 can decode Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD as well as the current surround sound formats: AC-3 and DTS. However, since the player only supports HDMI 1.2, it does not output raw Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD signals through HDMI.

In terms of connections, it has the standard offering, including one HDMI port and an ethernet port. Missing is the S-Video out port. But then again, LG's target audience for this player would probably not connect this device via an S-Video connection anyway. Also, lacking is the RS-232 jack for use with advanced home theater control systems.

The remote is simple but all the features are represented, including the colored Java buttons. The remote response is slow however, it get the job done.

The Test

For this test, we used our resident hi-def players mainly for feature comparision. These players are Samsung BD-P1000 Blu-ray Disc player and Toshiba HD-A2 HD-DVD Player. The test movie was Training Day (2001), one in Blu-ray Disc format and the other in HD-DVD. To test the player's DVD upconversion capability, we used about 10 DVDs from our collection, ranging from “Finding Nemo” to “Star Trek: The First Contact”.

First off, the load time. It took 30 seconds to load the Blu-ray Disc version of Training Day vs. 40 seconds for the HD-DVD version. As for standard DVD's, it took an average of 18 seconds on all our DVDs. Just for comparison, it took about 15 seconds to load our DVDs on our DVD players.

Blu-ray Java Menus Since it is Blu-ray Disc-certified, the device did not have any problem bringing up the interactive Java menus to show off the disc's advanced features and other selection. We are still concerned that it took about 10 seconds to load up the menu system. Though we can't really complain because our Samsung Blu-ray player also took about the same time.

As we mentioned, the BH100 does not support the HD-DVD's HDi interactive menu system. When calling up the disc menus, it displays a much simpler-looking HD-DVD menus at the bottom of the screen than the ones on the HD-A2. The available options were Title, Scene, Subtitle, and Audio. Missing was the “Special Features” menu present when played on the HD-A2. This meant, no access to features like the Director's Comments and music video by Nelly (boo hoo). According to c|net, LG has confirmed that neither the HDi functionality nor the HDMI 1.3 support will be upgradeable via firmware. Well, thanks, LG.

HDi Menus Non-HDi Menus
In terms of picture quality, we did not do a Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD comparison. For that, we'd like to refer you to this excellent article by Peter M. Bracke at High-Def Digest. We did attempt to do a Blu-ray vs. Blu-ray comparison and HD-DVD vs. HD-DVD comparison. However, after switching between the two HDMI ports on our Sharp Aquos 46” LCD for a few hours comparing different scenes, we did not find any noticeable differences between the BH100 and our dedicated players. But then again, maybe it was just us. We don't consider ourselves videophiles by any means. We are simply gadget-loving enthusiasts.


Next we tested the upconversion capability of the player. After all, we are sure that you are not about to go out and buy a hi-def version of all your DVDs, especially since the format war is not over yet.

Posterization on DVDs We do have mixed feelings about the player's ability to upconvert the DVD signals. Of over 10 DVDs we threw at it, we found the upconverted pictures varied from disc to disc. The worst being “Finding Nemo” on the scene where Nemo was going to school. Posterization was rampant. The best upconverted pictures were from “Star Wars: Attack of the Clone.” However, we have to say that the quality of upconversion paled in comparison to the recent demos we witnessed at CES. We just can't wait to get our hands on those players to play our existing DVD collection.

Conclusion

So can we recommend the BH100 after spending a whole week with it? That is a very good question. At $1199, everybody wanted to know if the player was worth the steep price. Our best answer is “it depends”.

First off, we would like to commend LG for being the first to offer a player that can play both hi-def formats. It is quite an engineering feat. The player plays discs from both formats flawlessly, sans HDi.

On the other hand, we couldn't help but feel that LG had rushed this player out in time for CES. Yes, it received the “Best Of Show” award from c|net. But it is no excuse not to offer HDi functionality and HDMI 1.3 support. Also, MP3 playback and JPEG file viewing would also be nice since most $30 DVD players can now perform these tasks.

Think of the BH100 as a premium Blu-ray Disc player that can also play HD-DVDs. If you have a movie collection consisting mainly of Blu-ray Discs and do not mind the lack of HDMI 1.3 support then this player is definitely for you. Vice versa, if you think you are going the HD-DVD route then this player might not be the best choice.

Because of its mixed-bag performance playing regular DVDs, we cannot recommend this player for DVD viewing. To rephrase the quote from the greatest philosopher of our time, Forrest Gump. “Playing DVDs is like a box of chocolate, you never know whatcha gonna get.”

If price is a concern (though you have expensive taste), and you already own an Xbox 360 or a PS3, then stick to the players offered by those consoles.

In the end, we have to say that we do like the BH100 for what it can do. It will always be remembered in the future as the first player to offer peace to the Blu-ray vs. HD-DVD format war.

 

Note: Gadgetaholic.com would like to thank our contributor, Aaron Sauma, for taking the time to shoot the video footage and for doing the initial write up of this review.

Comments (15)add comment

john said:

have you tried this machine with a sony 1080p tv... I hooked this machine up to a mitsu and it worked great.. than a 1080p sony and it only output 1080i...
January 29, 2007

Luck Kanthatham said:

John, I was able to achieve 1080p connection the first few times I connected it to the Aquos. However, subsequent connects only yielded 1080i. Beats me as to why it did that. I had no problem with the Samsung. The Toshiba only outputs 1080i.
January 29, 2007

spenser said:

What do you mean with HDMI 1.3a? The lastest version is HDMI 1.3 - see www.hdmi.org. Did you mix it up with HDMI 1.2a?
January 30, 2007

Luck Kanthatham said:

I stand corrected, spenser. HDMI 1.3a is for Compliance Test Specification. The article will be updated to reflect this. Thank you again for your input.
January 30, 2007

Blue said:

While HDMI 1.3 is required for send the "raw" audio bits to an external decoder like TrueHD or DTS-HD MA. Only HDMI 1.0 is required for transmitting the already decoded audio (by the player) to the receiver up to 8-channel/192kHz/24-bit. Did you guys test the audio support like TrueHD over HDMI or with the 5.1 analog jacks?
January 31, 2007

WesleyTech.com said:

Nice article! I look forward to the video.
http://WesleyTech.com
January 31, 2007

Christophe CHEREL said:

Cool test! i hope the others will follow the move!
One negative point : no 24p outpout...
February 02, 2007

KT said:

I'm in the process of sending back my second unit. I love everything about it - except it doesn't work with my AV receiver. I had the player connected via HDMI to a JVC RX-D702B receiver. The first unit would only say "Please Wait" when I turned it on - and one time I let it say that for 8 hours. Figured it was defective and returned it for another. Second unit started to do the same thing, so I just let it run without any AV plug ins and it booted fine. Turns out it will plug directly into the plasma HDMI port fine and not lock up, but it will freeze as soon as I plug it into my receiver's HDMI port. The tech support couldn't tell me if that was something that a firmware update would fix, so I guess I'll be waiting for version 2 to be made. *sigh*
February 02, 2007

Dennis Edwards said:

I think I'll wait & see who wins the race before I commit to a system.
Dennis UK
February 05, 2007

Jim Mahon said:

I have a Panasonic TH-65PX600U and could not get my BH100 to output 1080P. Only 1080i.
I called both LG and Panasonic tech support. LG tech support had me tweak the unit, but still only 1080i. So they had me send it back to them. I just got it back today.
They called me and said that my TV only accepts 1080P at 60hz. BH100 only outputs
1080P at 24 or 30hz. There is only one Plasma TV currently available that accepts
1080P at 24 or 30hz, and that is the LG 71 inch. LG admitted to me that the instuction
manual does not explain this. The instruction manual only says to set output to
1080P. The unit does not allow output set to 1080P when hooked up to the Panasonic 65
Plasma via HDMI, only 1080i. 1080P was grayed out. So I am stuck with a 1080i player
even though the box in big letters says 1080P. Very misleading.
February 14, 2007

Mike Dever said:

My reluctance to buy into the next Betamax led me to creating a website that lets consumers choose the next format. Like all simple ideas, this one mushroomed into something bigger, YouChoose.net, which is currently in beta. While people can post any campaign to help solve problems, the one that kicked it all off asks people to vote for the format they prefer and then Pledge to buy only the format that gathers the most votes. This can be seen at http://www.youchoose.net/pledge/bluray_vs_hd_dvd.
February 26, 2007

Mike Dever said:

February 26, 2007

I said:

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
April 19, 2007

Jon said:

All they need now is a good size hdd i the box perhaps 500gb.
August 12, 2007

Spinney said:

I currently have the Canadian Version SMB-007. i have had the unit for about 3 months now and have thought it was awesome. except that it won't play in 1080P on my Samsung LNS4096D LCD tv. only ever get 1080i out of it, swtich the res. to 1080P and my tv loses signal.
The other day bought the new BD simpsons movie and it won't read the disc. plays fine in my PS3 so now I am stumped as to why it won't play.
December 23, 2007

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