Panasonic DMP-UB900 Ultra HD Blu-ray Player Page 2

Panasonic’s player also outclasses its less expensive competition in the looks and build-quality department. In contrast to the more toy-like design of both the Philips and Samsung players, the DMP-UB900 has heft to it and comes across as a serious component. Those characteristics extend to the player’s remote control, a full-size model with a fully backlit keypad. Along with a direct access button for Netflix, the DMP-UB900’s remote provides buttons that let you display disc status, as well as tweak video and audio settings without halting playback. Having spent the past few months suffering with the tiny, awkward remote provided with Samsung’s player, for me the Panasonic’s remote alone would put it over the top.

117panabd.rem.jpgSetup
To test the DMP-UB900, I used its HDMI 2.0a output to connect a Vizio M65D0 Ultra HDTV and the second HDMI out to route audio to an Anthem preamp/processor, configuring each jack for video- and audio-only settings respectively in the HDMI Output Mode menus. For a network connection, I ran an Ethernet cable directly from my router to the player’s LAN port. (While my home’s Wi-Fi connection is reasonably robust, I find 4K streaming performance to be much more reliable when using a wired connection.)

The DMP-UB900’s HDMI menu provides settings to select output resolutions up to 4K/60p along with 4:4:4 (12-bit) or 4:2:0 (8-bit) color depending on the capabilities of your display. There’s also an Advanced Settings submenu with options to select Deep Color and HDR output.

A Video Settings menu provides additional adjustments, including advanced settings to tweak sharpness and noise reduction, along with basic ones for luminance, gamma, and color. The player also provides two picture memories to store and recall your adjustments. To use the Panasonic as a DLNA client, I fired up a media server application on my Mac (JRiver Media Center 21), pressed the DLNA button on the player’s remote control, and was able to browse and stream all manner of ripped and downloaded music from my digital library.

There was also a wide range of settings provided in the DMP-UB900’s Audio setup menu. The player has a High Clarity Sound mode that shuts off both video circuits and the front-panel display to reduce noise when playing music, and offers a range of Sound Effects settings to upsample lower-res files to up to 192-kHz/32-bit resolution or apply processing modes that model the effects of vacuum tube amps on audio signals.

Performance
During my testing of the DMPUB900, I had the opportunity to compare its performance with Samsung’s UBD-K8500 player. Watching a 4K UHD Blu-ray of Sicario, the image looked equally crisp, clean, and dynamic with both players—I found it nearly impossible to discern any video quality differences. In a scene where Kate is grilled in a meeting room by a group of CIA operatives, for example, the grizzled texture of the government agents’ faces came through clearly, even when depicted through a plate glass barrier. It didn’t matter if I played this scene using the Panasonic or the Samsung, it looked strikingly good on both.

Where the Panasonic did display an edge over the Samsung was in 1080p Blu-ray playback. When I watched a disc of The Wailing, a Korean film that could be best described as a comic-horror detective story, the beautifully shot scenes of the rural countryside were rendered in crisp 4K resolution by the Panasonic, with fine gradations of color and shadow detail clearly coming across. Played on the Samsung, the same disc looked notably less crisp and three-dimensional.

Part of the DMP-UB900’s excellent performance with conventional Blu-ray has to do with its sharpness adjustments, which can be applied independently to mid or high frequencies in the video signal and help punch up detail without adding ringing artifacts. The player’s noise reduction adjustments also help to clean up images without making them look overly soft in the process. I was less blown away by the player’s HDR-to-SDR conversion feature. When I checked this out with an HDR disc on a regular HDTV, the picture simply looked dim. And when I used the feature’s brightness adjustment to restore an acceptable level of light output, shadows lost depth and the image became less dynamic.

117panabd.2.jpg

Comparing the Panasonic’s audio performance with that of Pioneer’s BDP-88FD, another audiophile-oriented Blu-ray player that cost $2,000 when it was released, the Panasonic held up remarkably well. Listening to Aimee Mann’s “Save Me” from the CD soundtrack to the film Magnolia, the Pioneer was able to provide an authoritative sense of instrument placement in the mix, but its sound seemed dry and analytical. The DMP-UB900, in contrast, conveyed a distinct warmth that was a much better fit for the vocals on this song. I also enjoyed listening with the Sound Effects settings enabled, particularly the vacuum tube amp presets, which added an appealing sense of depth on certain tracks.

Panasonic’s player also performed well when I tapped its DLNA client feature to stream hi-res audio from my computer over a wired network. Listening to jazz pianist Brad Mehldau’s ballad “Little Person,” an 88.2-kHz/24-bit HDtracks FLAC download, the sound was liquid and warm, but also revealing of fine textures such as the pressure of fingers pushing down on piano keys. There was an excellent sense of separation between the instruments, even when acoustic bass and piano sync up near the song’s end and play the same phrase in lock-step.

Conclusion
With the arrival of Panasonic’s DMP-UB900, we finally have a player appropriately suited up to deliver the quality potential of not just Ultra HD Blu-ray, but regular Blu-ray, a format many enthusiasts have an investment in and will continue to watch for years to come. In addition, the DMP-UB900 sounds great when playing both hi-res audio files and CDs. Add to that list a full-featured remote control and flexible connectivity options, and it becomes clear which Ultra HD Blu-ray player is leading the pack—at least until models that also support Dolby Vision start to arrive.

117panabd.meas.jpg

COMPANY INFO
Panasonic
ARTICLE CONTENTS

X