Hi!,
Does anyone know of a Blu-Ray Player supporting BDXL Discs and preferrable having DTS-X & Dolby ATMOS Supoort? I have been going through the User Manuals of Many of them and they have like lists DISCS NOT SUPPORTED: BDXL. I am hoping there is one but haven't had any luck. Any help would be great.
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Probably not many set-top players can handle BDXL discs. They are not that common and fairly new. I've used a few for data discs.
Verbatim is the only brand BDXL I would recommend at present.
DTS-X & Dolby ATMOS support suggest commercial BD rips or conversions.
Most commercial BDs seem to be less than 50GB, much less if you leave out the 'extras', so not sure why you need 100GB BDs.
Maybe for 4K commercial BDs? I have no idea of their sizes.
Hopefully other members will have suggestions for set-top players that can handle BDXL discs. -
I don't think you will find any Blu-ray players with BDXL support now. Even UHD Blu-ray players either specifically say BDXL is not supported, or don't mention BDXL in the list of supported disc formats in their manual. The Blu-ray Disc Association is working on a spec for UHD Blu-ray on burned media, so it is possible that someday you'll find a UHD Blu-ray player that reads them, but it will probably take at least a couple of years for the feature to become available.
Ignore list: hello_hello, tried, TechLord, Snoopy329 -
Only one that i know of is this one - https://www.engadget.com/2010/10/22/sharps-ultraslim-bd-av70-blu-ray-bdxl-player-hitting-japan-so/
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Hi.
The Panasonic UB900 can play BDXL discs, can do the same the new Panasonic models???
Regards. -
Do you own a Panasonic UB900? If not, where did you see that the Panasonic UB900 can play BDXL discs? I downloaded the Panasonic UB900's owner's manual from their US website. The "Playable media" chart on page 6 lists BD-R and BD-RE as playable. BDXL is not mentioned at all in the manual.
Jake802 is in the USA. As far as I can tell the only Panasonic US-model Blu-ray players available here now are older than the Panasonic UB900 and do not list BDXL as playable.Ignore list: hello_hello, tried, TechLord, Snoopy329 -
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The Sony UBP-X700 will play BDXL-R disks providing that the content does not exceed ~66GB of data (i.e. data written only to the first 2 layers). Initially I burned an .iso image of Blade Runner 2049 4K (over 70GB) to a blank Verbatim BDXL-R disc but the X700 refused to read the disc. Recently, I read on another forum that only writing data to the first 2 layers will likely allow a UHD standalone blu-ray player to read these type of discs. Tried that theory by writing an iso image of Star Trek Into Darkness 4K (approx 60GB) to a Verbatim BDXL-R disc and can confirm that the Sony UBP-X700 will play this disc without any problems.
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Hey Oakeyt,
Can you please advise which burner you use and what software you use to burn star trek.
I use dvdfab to rip them to an iso file then use either nero or dvd fab.
I have tried 5 times to burn disc and my oppo can't read the disc or my friends oppo gets to the layer change and the movie freezes.
It would be great if the sony ubp-x700 worked. I'm in australia and this machine is available locally.
Also too are you using the 100gb verbatim bdxl-r discs.
thanks
Oakeyt
Re: BluRay Player with BDXL Support
The Sony UBP-X700 will play BDXL-R disks providing that the content does not exceed ~66GB of data (i.e. data written only to the first 2 layers). Initially I burned an .iso image of Blade Runner 2049 4K (over 70GB) to a blank Verbatim BDXL-R disc but the X700 refused to read the disc. Recently, I read on another forum that only writing data to the first 2 layers will likely allow a UHD standalone blu-ray player to read these type of discs. Tried that theory by writing an iso image of Star Trek Into Darkness 4K (approx 60GB) to a Verbatim BDXL-R disc and can confirm that the Sony UBP-X700 will play this disc without any problems. -
Deleted as I was talking about a Blu-ray drive and not a Blu-ray player which OP is after.
Last edited by KarMa; 7th Jun 2018 at 02:37.
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Hi Kadu7475,
Yes, I use Imgburn to burn the .iso to a blank verbatim bdxl-r 100gb disc
An .iso is a file. Imgburn has many options, one of which is to burn an .iso file to disc
Use dvdfab to convert the movie (full disc) to an .iso
Burn the .iso that is an exact copy of the original movie including menus, extras etc. to the blank disc, remembering that if the .iso file is larger than ~66gb you won't be able to play it on the Sony ubp-x700
Hope this helps -
Just to be clear on how much data you can write to these Verbatim BDXL-R 100GB discs before the Sony UBP-X700 refuses to read them: although the discs are stated as being 100GB, their actually data capacity is 93.2GB. Therefore, based on an assumption that each of the 3 layers are the same size, the maximum amount of data that the combined first 2 layers will hold is 62.13GB
Cheers -
Hey Oakeyt,
which one do you use on imageburn to copy
[Attachment 45847 - Click to enlarge]
hope that worked -
It's a decimal vs binary data sizes thing. The disc manufactures are technically correct but everyone else uses binary data sizes but labels them with decimal units. GB (decimal) GiB (binary). It did not really matter much back when we only dealt with KBs and MBs but now the difference is getting out of hand.
https://www.google.com/search?q=100+gigabytes+to+gigibytes&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-b-1 -
The actual size of the data storage space on optical discs is shown to the upper left on this page in 'WHAT IS' Blu-ray and DVD.
I still recommend only Verbatim BDXL discs and ImgBurn to burn those discs, Other brands may vary. You will also need a compatible BDXL optical writer. -
What do you mean by "UDF / Mode"?
UDF is universal disk format, "a disc imaging format used for storing files on optical media"
What exactly are you trying to do? e.g. burn an iso image to a blank blu-ray disc.
You need to provide as much detail as possible if you want to receive the right/best advice -
Just go with UDF 2.60 (shouldn't matter between this and 2.5 when you're creating a single session, disc-at-one burn, but just to be safe), mode1/2048 (only mode possible with DVDs and BDs).
Scott -
So it is believed I can use Verbatim BDXL's, the Sony UDP-X700, and keep the files under 60 GB's for UHD?It appears here in the states it is a Sony UBP-X700.
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Does somebody has tried to read BD-R XL video with the new Panasonic DP-UB820 (Europe name) ? This reader is new dynamic HDR "standards" most "open" : HDR10, HLG, HDR10+, Dolby Vision and I believe a future "Technicolor" spec...
But today, nobody has been able to confirm for me that DP-UB820 could read correctly video BD-R XL burned with imgburn like its old brother Panasonic DMP-UB900 do (I own one, but no hope it will one day support HDR10+ and Dolby Vision for hardware carence reason)...
Thanks in advance -
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Sure ? Is it a report or result of your own experience ? If real, it's a very bad news ! With Panasonic, I need 2 players : one for BD-R XL reading (UB900) and one for DV, HDR10+ aso reading (UB820)... I don't understand why "downgrading" a capacity like this ! Unless it is the reader himself who can not read BR 3 layers while that of the UB900 could ...
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Not my own experience. In Mundodvd a spanish forum people who have it have reported that they donīt work.
what software and settings do you use to burn the bdxl??, I use imgburn but in the 3 recordings that I have made, they are played in jumps with my Panasonic UB900
Regards. -
[Attachment 46009 - Click to enlarge]
this is what i got from my burn anyone help. please
dave -
Looks like you have a failed burn, or at least one or more sectors did not write properly or imperfections in the disc made it impossible to write to that sector. If this popped up during verification (not during the burn) then most of the disc is probably still readable but it has errors. Best this to do is to try and burn again with a new disc. If you keep getting errors you might consider blowing compressed air in your open drive to try and get any dust off the laser.
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I have over 60 terabytes of movie data (the entire deleted catalog) burned to 100GB and 128GB BDXL discs. I have found that the best way to play these movies on my TV is by plugging in an external blu-ray drive (I am using Pioneer BDR-XS07 drive) to a Nvidia Shield TV Pro using a Y-cable (needs both USB ports to properly power the external drive) and hooking the Shield TV Pro to my TV via HDMI.
To access the content of the discs, you will need an application called 'MLUSB Mounter' as well as the 'UDF/ISO Mount' extension (costs like $2.50) for it. There are many media players for Android that you can use, but I personally use MX Player/MX Player Pro, and VLC.
Technically this method should work with any modern Android box with USB-A ports but I can personally vouch for the Nvidia Shield TV Pro. I also have a Samsung tablet with MLUSB installed that I use to read files on burned discs and playback my 35,000+ movie collection.Last edited by Baldrick; 13th Dec 2021 at 12:23. Reason: Link deleted
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