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CNET editors' rating:
3.5 stars
Very good
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Product summary
The good: Belkin's PureAV three-port switcher lets you toggle between three HDMI A/V sources. It can pass all current digital audio and video formats, including uncompressed multichannel audio and 1080p HD video. The unit is tiny but well built, and it ships with a remote that offers discrete input access.
The bad: Having three HDMI inputs is great, but four or five would've been even better. Similar switchers are available for less. And there's no power switch, so pulling the plug is the only way to turn the unit off.
The bottom line: The Belkin PureAV switch delivers an easy and affordable way to add HDMI capacity to your home theater.
Price range: $269.99
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 08/22/2006
- Released on: 08/01/2006
Before examining the specifics of the Belkin switcher, it's worth considering why you'd want--or need--an HDMI switcher. Most video devices have been transitioning to HDMI (high-definition multimedia interface) over the past couple of years--you'll find it on virtually all new HDTVs, HD cable and satellite boxes, high-def Blu-ray and HD-DVD players, and even most new DVD players and recorders. But many HDTVs offer only a single HDMI input, which poses a problem for anyone who owns--or is planning to buy--more than one of the aforementioned devices: if you want to watch your HD cable box via HDMI, you can't watch your upscaling DVD player, or vice versa. As more HDMI devices appear on the market--such as the much ballyhooed PlayStation 3--the need to switch easily between HDMI sources becomes ever more important. And while a wider selection of affordable HDMI-switching receivers from the likes of Denon, Yamaha, Onkyo, Pioneer, JVC, and Sony are finally making their way to store shelves, all but the most expensive models--such as the $2,000 Denon AVR-4306--feature a mere two HDMI inputs.
It's precisely that void that the Belkin HDMI switcher is designed to fill. The silver box is a mere 7.19 inches wide by 3.13 deep and just an inch high, but the metal (rather than plastic) housing gives the tiny device a solid feel. It might be mistaken for a small networking hub, and, indeed, it's essentially the A/V equivalent of one. Its back side sports three HDMI inputs and one output, while the spartan front panel readout offers four green LEDs, two of which are on at any given time: the power indicator, and one to indicate which of the three inputs is active. There's no power button, so the device is always on, though the 6-volt wall-wart power supply is one of the most diminutive we've seen.
Setup is strictly plug-and-play--plug in as many as three HDMI sources and run a single output cable to your HD monitor. (DVI cables and devices work just as well as HDMI, provided you use the appropriate adapters.) You cycle through the inputs using the included tiny remote control. The best thing about the remote is that it offers discrete input access--individual buttons for each of the three sources. That means you can use any decent universal remote control to "learn" the Belkin's input toggle commands, then program macros that jump directly to any of your three HDMI sources. (If you misplace the remote, you can use the single button on the face of the Belkin switcher to cycle through the inputs instead.)
We connected some of the latest HDMI-capable devices--the Toshiba HD-A1 HD-DVD player, the Samsung BD-P1000 Blu-ray player, and the Denon DVD-3910 upscaling DVD player--to put the Belkin switcher through its paces. It worked without a hitch, toggling to each of those sources on demand, with each of the several HDTVs to which we attached it: the Sony KDS-60A2000, the Samsung LN-S3252D, and the Vizio L37HDTV. Significantly, each player was able to pass video at all standard resolutions: 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i, and from the Samsung Blu-ray player, 60-frame 1080p. Using our Sencore signal generator as the source, the Belkin was also able to handle the 24-frame 1080p video test pattern. That rare resolution isn't something you'll encounter in the real world anytime soon--we viewed it on the Dell W3706MC, which is one of the very few TVs to date that can even accept a 1080p24 signal--but the Belkin's success with it spoke well of its versatility. Moreover, the fact that both the HD-DVD and Blu-ray players worked without a hitch means that the Belkin had no problem passing the HDCP signal, which is critical as more high-def material becomes copy-protected.
Continue reading- See more CNET content tagged:
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Where to buy
Belkin PureAV HDMI Interface 3-to-1 Video Switch:
$269.99
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Amazon.com
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$269.99 | See Site |
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