GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Features" Archives

Published January 1, 2003

 

Buying a DVD-Audio Player in the Midwest -- One GoodSound! Guy’s Experience

Those of you who live on the left or right coasts may not realize this, but not all of us have free and easy access to all things audio and video. Out here among the corn and bean fields of the Midwest there simply aren’t a lot of choices when it comes time to look at new products. Take the town I live in as an example. This is a small city of roughly 100,000 people in the middle of farm country, at the juncture of two major interstate highways. The nearest cities of any size have populations comparable to this one and are an hour or two in each direction. The nearest real city is almost a half-day’s drive away, which makes a day trip possible, but not likely for somebody shopping on a budget.

Let’s face it, when you live in a town of 100,000, your selection is going to be limited. My particular town is home to a pair of big-box stores, two department stores that sell some electronics, and one and a half specialty audio retailers (more on that in a bit). Since I originally hail from a much larger city, I sometimes find the limitations of living and shopping in this land of strip malls and minivans more than a little frustrating. I look forward to trips into the city for no other reason than having the opportunity to drop by one or two real audio stores while I’m there.

Looking for DVD-Audio

Recently, the DVD player in our bedroom system went belly up and an immediate replacement was in order. I could have ordered directly off the Internet and had a player in a few days, but lacking patience and being the kind of guy who likes to at least play with the remote before I plop down my hard-earned cash, I ventured out to brave the local stores and see what I could find.

So off we went to check what the five and a half places in town had to offer. Now, being into music as much as I am and possessing two systems that are fully capable of handling the input from a six-channel player, I thought it would be nice to pick up one of the new breed of inexpensive DVD-A or SACD players for the bedroom system and see what I thought. This should be a simple enough task, even out here in the middle of nowhere. Right? Wrong.

Stop one, by simple virtue of the fact that it’s closest to my house, was the larger of the two big-box stores. They had two models of DVD-A players on display but none in stock. The salesperson explained that there simply wasn’t enough demand to justify stocking them. However, they could get one in about a week or I could order it from their Internet site. Thanks. I’ll keep looking.

At the second big box they didn’t have any DVD-A or SACD players. Actually, the sales kid wasn’t sure what they were but was pretty sure they didn’t have any. Thanks. He had already run off to help somebody looking at DirecTV receivers. I looked at all their models and he was right, but not because he had any idea what I was talking about.

Stop three was right across the street and the first department store on the list. They had one of the players the first big box had, but at a much higher price. Of course, I was about fourth in line and had to wait for the poor guy to finish writing up a sale on a digital camera before I could find this out, but he was at least helpful when he got around to me. He wasn’t exactly sure what DVD-A was either, but at least showed an interest. He thought it sounded like a cool idea and would like to hear it sometime. They didn’t have one in stock but he could order one and it would arrive in four or five days. Thanks. I’ll keep looking.

Stop four was the full dealer of the one-and-a-half specialty dealers, and they were already closed for the night. So was the half-dealer at stop five. It’s hard to be a specialty dealer here, and the full dealer is located in an office/light industrial park so I suspect they don’t get much business at night. Actually, nobody I know had even heard of them before I mentioned them, so I wonder if they get much business at all.

I made one last stop, at the second department store, which had absolutely nothing to offer and nobody was around to answer any questions. By this time I was getting a little grumpy. "Thanks. I’ll keep looking," I said to nobody at all.

Fine, I thought, I’ll check out the specialty dealers tomorrow. Surely the full-line dealer would have one. But it turned out that none of the three DVD players that the full dealer had on display was DVD-A or SACD either, but he could certainly order me one if I wanted it. He might be getting a new model if we could wait a week or two and he thought it might be DVD-A. Thanks. I’ll keep looking.

My last hope was the half specialty store (named because only half of what they sell pertains to audio/video) and I wasn’t expecting much from them. They more than lived up to my expectations as both salespeople were far too busy selling cellular phones -- yes, that’s right, cell phones -- to be bothered with an audio customer. It didn’t really matter though, since they didn’t have anything either. I’ll call them on my cell phone later and thank them.

In the end, I went back to the first big-box store, where they at least knew what DVD-A and SACD were, and bought the bottom-of-the-line Toshiba DVD player for less than a hundred bucks. I figure that at that price when I finally get around to ordering a decent DVD-A or SACD player off the Internet I can give this one to my daughter. I really want one of these players but I realize now that there’s no rush because if it’s not on the shelves here, nobody is buying it, and if the sales staff doesn’t even know what it is, it’s not a real product yet.

Until DVD-A or SACD start selling in real numbers around here, they’re nothing more than a mere footnote on the CEA’s sales figures. I guess that’s one advantage to living in the middle of nowhere. I can tell before most of the rest of you when a product has finally gained enough support with the general population that it might survive in the marketplace. With prices for decent budget players hovering around $200 you would think this technology would start to catch on, but it hasn’t started to happen here yet. Too bad, as I think they offer some real potential. Will they ever make it to the mainstream in Middle America? I don’t know, but if that sales kid should try to talk me into buying a DVD-A player anytime soon, I’ll let you know. In the meantime, I’ll keep looking.


GOODSOUND!All Contents Copyright © 2003
Schneider Publishing Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Any reproduction of content on
this site without permission is strictly forbidden.