Region Free DVD
Player
Would you like to be able to buy DVD's from
anywhere in the world without wondering if they will play on
your DVD player or not. With a Region Free DVD
Player, you would not have to wonder!
-
You are in the USA
and at last, you have got hold of that British TV
series DVD that you have been after for
ages. Now,
after a long wait, it has arrived from the auction
seller in the UK.
-
Eager to watch the
series, you put the disc into your DVD player and
then... Nothing apart from a message on the display
saying 'Wrong Region'
or words to that effect.
-
Is the DVD faulty?
Is there something wrong with my DVD player? Why
won't it play on my system?.
The box says
the DVD disc is Region Free (or Region Zero or
All Region) - That means that the DVD will
play anywhere in the world doesn't it?
Well, the good news is that there is nothing
wrong with your DVD Player or the DVD disc. The bad news is
that you have just discovered the wonderful world of DVD Region
Coding or Region Locking as it is sometimes referred to. So I
hear you ask, what is DVD Region Coding and why is it needed.
Our DVD Regions
Explained page will reveal all.
Although a
Region Free, Region Zero or All Region disc will play fine on
any Region Locked player, there is the added compatibility
issue between PAL and NTSC video formats. For example, a Region
Free DVD purchased in the UK will not play correctly on a US
NTSC DVD player because the DVD would be in the PAL video
format. It is a common misconception that simply because a
video format is digital, as is the case of DVD's, it is no
longer PAL or NTSC. All digital video formats, including DVD
are still based on the PAL or NTSC video systems. But what are
PAL and NTSC video systems?. Check out our Video
Standards page to find out more
Similar to
multisystem VCR's, DVD players will NOT
convert video standards. When you play a PAL standard DVD, it
will output a PAL signal and when you are playing an NTSC
standard DVD, it will output an NTSC signal. DVD's are not
produced in the SECAM video format.
Solutions
There are three ways to watch both PAL and NTSC
DVD's.
-
You can view your
DVD's on a Multi-System Television. A multi-system
TV has the ability to receive and display both PAL
and NTSC video signals.
-
You could use a video standards converter which
would receive a video signal and convert that
signal into the desired video standard. So if you
wanted to watch a PAL DVD disc and you are in the
USA with a standard NTSC television, the converter
could convert the signal from PAL to NTSC, which
would then be viewable on your television.
-
You can purchase a
Region Free DVD Player (Also known as a Multi
Region DVD Player or a Code Free DVD Player) with a
built in video standards converter.
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