COMPETITION: Win a Marantz DV7001 universal player - worth £600! *NOW CLOSED*

Andrew Everard 25 August 2007 09:01

Marantz DV7001_anglebig

COMPETITION NOW CLOSED - ENTRIES MADE AFTER 12.00 BST ON 31/08/2007 WILL NOT BE ENTERED INTO THE DRAW.

The Marantz DV7001 is a consistent favourite of ours - combining DVD playback with 1080p upscaling, DVD-Audio/SACD capability and high-quality CD sound, it would make a fine addition to any system. And now you can win one, in our web-exclusive competition.

The DV7001 uses high-quality 216MHz/12-bit digital to analog conversion for video processing, NSV precision video and video up-conversion via HDMI, making it an ideal partner for any HD-ready TV.

Audio quality is assured by the use of separate Crystal 24-bit/192kHz digital to analogue converters for each channel, the company's unique Hyper-Dynamic Amplifier Modules (HDAMs) and other Marantz-specific sound modifications in the audio sections.

It will also play DiVx discs, MP3 and WMA files, and JPEG and Picture CD images, and has a full suite of outputs, including HDMI, component, composite and S-video and Scart, plus stereo and multichannel analogue audio as well as optical and electrical digital.

It all adds up to a superb player, and you can win it!.

Click here to head on over to our Home Cinema forum to find the simple question you have to answer, register, then post your answer. We'll email the lucky winner on the 31st of August, 2007.

Please don't post entries on the end if this message - they won't be counted. Post them on the forum thread, please

Click here to find out more about the DV7001 and the rest of the Marantz range.

Comments

Anonymous comments are disabled

About Andrew Everard

Andrew Everard, Audio Editor of Gramophone since November 1999 and What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision's Consulting Editor, read English at Queens' College, Cambridge a very long time ago! He started his journalistic career in 1982 on Haymarket's photographic magazines, and subsequently worked on What Hi-Fi?, High Fidelity, Audiophile and Home Cinema magazines, as well as contributing a monthly column to Japanese title HiVi.