LG BX580

LG BX580

3 expert reviews - 0 user reviews

7.7/10
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We have collected 3 reviews of the LG BX580. Experts rate LG BX580 7.7/10. Reviewsor.com helps you find reviews, best prices, user reviews of the LG BX580 and LG Blu-ray players.

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LG BX580 Reviews

DigitalVersus

01/2011

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8.0/10

Reviews: Blu-ray Players

The BX580 is LG's first Blu-ray player that's compatible with the Blu-ray 3D standard. It comes with plenty of features, including support for 802.11n WiFi networks and DLNA. As well as fitting in the smallest of spaces—it's just 8 cm deep—and having a sleek mirror finish, this Blu-ray player has an excellent rage of features. That includes a HDMI 1.4 output, as well as component and composite video ports. It might not have multi-channel analogue audio outputs, but it does have analogue stereo, coaxial and optical audio. An Ethernet port and a WiFi card allow you to get online. Unfortunately, there's no internal memory to store BD-Live content. If you want to use it, you'll need to plug in a memory stick, meaning that the little flap in front of the USB slot will be open almost all the time. There's a small fan at the back, and you can hear it whirring away during some quieter moments; we would just as easily have done without. The BX580 also has a media player which can access external devices formatted using NTFS. Once you've connected a USB key or an external hard drive at the front, you can play a wide variety of files.

PCWorld

12/2010

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9.0/10

LG Electronics BX580

The LG BX580 does an excellent job turning the bits on a DVD or Blu-ray disc into stunning images. Its Internet content and multimedia capabilities are among the best. And for a 3D Blu-ray player, the $200 estimated street price (as of November 22, 2010) is remarkably reasonable. PCWorld doesn't test or grade 3D image quality, but the BX580 produced particularly impressive results in our regular 2D tests. It received grades of Superb on most of our tests, and never scored less than Very Good. It received its worst scores--straight Very Goods--on our Phantom of the Opera DVD test (chapter 3). Even there, the sense of depth it produced in one long shot was simply amazing--for a DVD, of course. In other shots, however, it showed only slightly more detail than our reference player, a Sony PlayStation 3. No such qualifications are necessary when praising its Blu-ray image quality. Everything looked dark in a night scene from The Searchers (chapter 20), yet no details were lost, and John Wayne's suspenders seemed to jump out of the screen. In the black-and-white Good Night and Good Luck test (chapter 1), extras who looked out of focus on the PS3 were near razor-sharp here.

TechRadar

11/2010

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6.0/10

LG BX580 review

For a brand that's been aggressively at the forefront of 3D technology, and which has recently signed a much-trumpeted 'preferred TV partner' 3D deal with Sky, LG has been somewhat tardy with letting us have a look at its debut 3D Blu-ray player. But it's finally here, in the shape of the BX580, and it's a shame it's now got such an awful lot of scarily strong competition to contend with. Aesthetically it's reasonably pleasing, combining an impressively small footprint and a minimalist fascia that's actually a smokey flap, which hides a series of manual control buttons and a front-mounted USB port. Other than this, the BX580's connections run to a single v1.4 HDMI, a LAN port, both coaxial and optical digital audio outputs, a component video output, a composite video output (which I strongly recommend you don't use), and a stereo audio phono output. There are two obvious disappointments with this connection set, given that the BX580 isn't especially cheap by modern Blu-ray standards. First of all, there's only one HDMI, which could prove a problem if you've only got an AV receiver with HDMI v1.3 specification. Old contacts Secondly, there are no multichannel analogue audio line-outs.