SteveInNC
Well-known member
According to this article from Audioholics, Lexicon stuck an Oppo BDP-83 in their own chasis, then attempted to sell it for $3500.
According to this article from Audioholics, Lexicon stuck an Oppo BDP-83 in their own chasis, then attempted to sell it for $3500.
They're not the only ones. Ayre's DX-5 is Oppo based and so is Theta's supposedly upcoming unit. They both are still using some of the internals but are adding a heavier chassis and other modifications including power supply changes to justify the cost. Even Charles Hansen on the AVS forum told a potential buyer that his DX-5 is a great unit but also said the Oppo was a good unit in itself and would probably suffice for video playback.
I just started reading the article. Lexicon basically just dropped the Oppo in a chassis and are calling it their new Blu Ray player?:duh:
Has anyone purchased the Oppo BDP 83SE (special edition) yet? While I don't really want to chage the direction of this thread, I think the question is close enough since the thread is about how other mfgrs are modifying the BDP 83 for their own labeling.
Theta did that a number of years ago with their Voyager laserdisc player. If you took the top off you found an entire Pioneer LD player, chassis and all (the Theta was a enormous unit). They claimed to have designed their own digital processing stage which somehow added up to a unit that retailed for over 9k (!). The Voyager did not fare well compared to other high-end players at the time.
It's kind of like building codes in Southern California...
If you build a house from scratch, you have a lot of issues, but if you tear an existing house down to one wall, it's a "remodel" and subject to fewer fines and building codes.
In Michigan we have our own code based on the International code. Unless you are increasing structural loads more than around 7%, the existing "structure" is good to go. This has not prevented building departments from demanding existing framing drawings of joists which have stood the test of time, nor requesting calculations for all new work. The codes are the same, fines are typically double of permits although that varies by state/community."remodel" and subject to fewer fines and building codes.
DrJRapp: However, it's nearly universal throughout the US now that any renovation in excess of 25% of the assessed valuation of the property ( over any 12 month period of time) requires everything be brought up to current building codes.
Getting back on-topic, Gene DellaSala at Audioholics re-tested the Lexicon unit for multi-channel performance, and found it actually underperforms the Oppo, because Oppo has released a number of firmware updates to address bass management issues, whereas Lexicon has not!
http://forums.audioholics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=675834&postcount=81
As this whole escapade is garnering attention all over the web, there will be significant long-term fallout for high-end brands that "rebadge" OEM gear and then sell at a much higher price point, as well as those online or print reviewers who wax eloquently about such "upgraded" components. Hopefully, legitimate "modders" like Allen Wright and Dan Wright, will start listing their component upgrades and/or test-bench specs that prove why their product is better than the stock unit. IMHO, Lexicon's continued reticence to "come clean" on this matter has permanently tarnished their reputation, if not totally jeopardizing their long-term viability.
I think this effort by Lexicon is the latest example of a outdated business model being exposed in today's communications environment. Long live the interwebs...
This is a double edged sword as there is a ton of miss-information out there too.
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