LATEST ADDITIONS

Scott Wilkinson  |  Sep 06, 2008  |  First Published: Sep 07, 2008

I first saw Hitachi's 1.5 line of LCD TVs—so called because they are 1.5 inches think—at CES last January. New at CEDIA is the 47-inch version, which will list for $3700 when it ships in October.

Scott Wilkinson  |  Sep 06, 2008  |  First Published: Sep 07, 2008

Runco wasn't the only brand with a new in-wall rear-pro. Digital Projection was showing its Titan RP97, which mounts a Titan 1080p-500 projector behind a 97-inch-diagonal "optical black screen" with 0.85 gain that completely rejects ambient light. Touting this system as an alternative to large-screen plasmas (think Panasonic's 103-inch monster), it's fully self-contained and supports its own weight so the wall doesn't have to. You'll shell out $100,000 for it, but the Panasonic 103 is even more than that, making the Titan RP97 a bargain.

Scott Wilkinson  |  Sep 06, 2008  |  First Published: Sep 07, 2008

I almost missed the non-working prototype of Oppo's long-awaited BDP-83 Blu-ray player in one corner of the DVDO booth. Not much was revealed except that it will be BD-Live and have 7.1-channel analog outputs. Oh yeah, it will also have the DVDO VRS processing onboard thanks to a new chip, the ABT2010, which is also used in the new Edge processor.

Scott Wilkinson  |  Sep 06, 2008  |  First Published: Sep 07, 2008

If you can't afford the $3500 DVDO VP50 Pro video processor from Anchor Bay Technologies, here's some great news: a new processor called the Edge that incorporates the power of the VP50 Pro in a svelte package costing only $800. It's less customizable and has no grayscale or color-point control, but it does provide outstanding noise reduction and deinterlacing as well as basic picture controls for each input, of which there are 6 HDMIs.

Tom Norton  |  Sep 06, 2008
B&W has added three models to its CM range of speakers: The CM9 ($1500 each) is now the largest of the two CM floor-standers, the CM5 ($750 each) now the largest of the two stand-mounters, and the CMC-2 three-way center channel ($1000). More on the intriguing center channel design below.
Tom Norton  |  Sep 06, 2008
Here's the new B&W CM series center channel, the CMC-2. The big change here is the use of a vertically positioned midrange and tweeter, which is nearly always the best way to configure a center speaker, if you must use a horizontal design--and most of us do. The midrange here is also a new and exciting design; it's a smaller version of the surround-free (FST) midrange driver that's featured in many B&W models, including the new CM9 (above).
Darryl Wilkinson  |  Sep 06, 2008
One was too big. One was too small. And the other one was just right.
Darryl Wilkinson  |  Sep 06, 2008
Green is in this year at CEDIA (as it is everywhere), although I didn’t see anyone promoting converting a Toyota Prius into an install van.
Tom Norton  |  Sep 06, 2008
There's a whole new 15 series of Rotel AV receivers and separates, finished in handsome new dress (also available in black). The two receivers and pre-pro decode all the new audio formats via HDMI, and will pass 1080p/24 on HDMI (there is no video processing--a deliberate design choice).
Tom Norton  |  Sep 06, 2008
Classe is bringing out a whole line of electronics designed specifically for custom installation in a rack. Though the cosmetics are different from their standard lineup, the performance and prices) are not. Shown here is their 600W (into 8 ohms) monster monoblock.

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