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Author
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Topic: Viewing Region A BDs if you live in Region B
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 09-11-2012 05:19 PM
Thought the following anecdote was worth putting on the web in case anyone else - either an F-T regular or Google-directed visitor - is in a similar situation.
As some of you know, I'm a native Brit who has been travelling back and forth from Southern California on work for 5-6 years now and, on one of these trips, met who is now my fiancee, and as a result of that, has been making these trips even more frequently since 2010. Being a university, geeky type (sorry!), I have a load of colleagues and students who want to order Region A BDs from the US arthouse publishers (Milestone, Kino, Criterion etc.) that are not available either at all or of any similar quality on this side of the Atlantic, and have been asked repeatedly for possible solutions for playing these BDs here.
For some reason, all region DVD players cost in effect no more than Region 2-tied ones in Britain, either region free out of the box or with a hack code only a Google search away. But the same is not true for BD players - the last I looked, no UK retailer was selling an all region player for less than £300.
So I decided on an experiment - is it possible to buy a bargain basement player in America, take it home with me in my suitcase and use the thing to play Region A BDs in England?
The answer is yes - worked like a charm. Last week I bought a Hitachi HBD361 for $86 (including sales tax) at the Target in Citrus Plaza, Redlands, CA, and took it back with me in my checked baggage. The mains transformer inside the unit is for US voltage only, so I bought one of these via Ebay UK. Just plugged it in, connected the player to the HDMI socket in my PC monitor and inserted a Region A BD disc which I've tried in a Region B player without success, and it played without any problem.
So the moral of this story is that (1) your typical supermarket BD player will withstand handling in checked airline baggage, and (b) it'll also work fine with a cheap, low wattage power supply converter.
Given the price of BD region hacking software that actually works, I thought this was worth a mention. The bottom line - if you want to watch Region A discs bought on Amazon etc., and either you or anyone you know is planning a visit to the United States, just buy a player there, bring it back and get a low wattage power supply converter to run it on here - far cheaper and less hassle than any software option I know of.
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