Anybody heard Philips new tubed micro system?


I am shopping for an all-in-one system for my father who recently moved to an apartment. He is looking for a simple system that will play DVDs and CDs. He needs a very clear presentation of vocals and speech to overcome his weak hearing (most built in TV speakers are muddled).

For context, his former music playing system consisted of Macintosh and Sony ES electronics and well maintained Advent speakers. Given the state of his hearing, he does not want to drop $3500 to $6000 on an Arcam, TA or Naim system, nor does he want 6-7 cheesy plastic speakers with wires running all over his new apartment from the likes of Samsung, Panasonic, Sony, etc.

Which brings me to the Philips MCD908/37 - DVD Micro Theater DivX

http://www.consumer.philips.com/consumer/en/us/consumer/cc/_productid_MCD908_37_US_CONSUMER/DVD-Micro-Theater+MCD908-37

On the face of it, this system is crazy off the chart:

-75 watt RMS per channel digital amp (x2 for stereo)
-built in vacuum tube preamplifier (with a little window to watch the tubes glow)
-AM/FM tuner
-Dolby digital decoding
-DivX, DVD+RW, DVD-Video, Picture CD, Video CD/SVCD, audio CD, CD+R, CD+RW, MP3
-High Def (720p, 1080i), Video upsampling, Video upscaling
-12bit, 108MHz D/A Converter
-3 way, Ribbon tweeter, Dome mid range, 5" woofer, Gold-plated speaker connectors (relatively big, heavy boxes)
-speakers boxes and sides of electronic cabinet are highly polished real wood - looks expensive
-subwoofer out
-leather and aluminum remote control
-decent speaker wires included
-suggested retail price $599 USD

...and it doesn't sound half bad. Huh?

I have listened to this unit play a couple of CDs in highly compromised circumstances on crowded shelves at two different retailers and it sounds good, but not as good as it looks (looks like Musical Fidelity and Dali combo, except for blue glowing lights that ring both sides of unit briefly when any function buttons are hit). I have not had a chance to observe the video performance as of yet. An aside: most sales people at big box stores where this is likely to be sold have no idea how to market something like this.

Question 1. Does anybody have any experience with this unit? livability, reliability, sound quality in real world setting, video performance, upscaling?

Question 2. How can Philips produce this unit for this price? Are they going for Sony's throat?

Any feedback much appreciated.
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Showing 3 responses by knownothing

I think CNET review is for another model. Couldn't find this one in the list for Philips.
Geared4me, Thanks for the info. I found the sound to be acceptable compared to other all-in-one systems in this price range, but was concerned about the video upscaling. Apparently CNET found both the audio and video performance underwhelming. Not terribly surprising given the list price. Looks like the industrial designers and feature marketers won out over the audio and video engineers in decisions about where to cut costs.

Well, at least its nice to look at when its turned off...

PS - my research indicates that to get a compact 2.1 system that even approaches moderate separates in terms of sound and video quality you would have to spend about $1600 on the Denon S302. LOL
Semi,

There are a bunch of good selections in compact systems when looking for sound only. The small Denons kick it and JVC makes some nice "executive" desk top systems with very clean amps and wood cone speakers(!). I have a cheap little Onkyo unit in my office that utilizes a digital amp and some modest 4 ohm speakers and it sounds surprisingly good.

But compact systems with good two channel sound and video upscaling that will drive an HDTV are really rare as of now. That will probably change, but the Philips, a unit from Sony and the two models from Denon are probably the only units aspiring to hit that target for now.