Fyi guys,
The Ayre DX-5 was not a rebadge of the Oppo bdp-83. Ayre only uses Oppo 83's disc drive (disc transport mechanism), Oppo's chassis, Oppo's video processing board & video clock, Oppo's firmware & GUI & OSD & possibly Oppo's remote. That's it. Everything else was Ayre all the way. Ayre built & designed its own power supplies, power supply caps, regulator, voltage regulator, USB input implementation design, audio clock, DAC, DAC implementation & configuration, digital filters, analog output buffer, analog audio output stages, etc.
The only things you will find inside the Ayre DX-5 are Oppo's disc transport mechanism (disc drive) & Oppo's video processing board & Oppo's video clock but not the audio clock. They share the same platform (chassis).
Ayre wasn't the only one that used Oppo's disc transport & Oppo's video processing board, firmware, GUI & OSD. Some other high end hifi manufacturers also do the same with their universal bluray disc players. Theta, EMC, MSB Technology, and McIntosh MVP901, which uses the same Mediatek based video processing platform as the Oppo 105. The McIntosh MVP901 uses same disc transport mechanism, HDMI & video processing board, video clock and all the way to HDMI output transmitters as that of the Oppo 105/103. Both the Mac MVP901 & the Oppo 105/103 also share the same menu setups, GUI, OSD. Except on the main menu on the MVP901 says McIntosh instead of Oppo.
The Ayre DX-5 was not a rebadge of the Oppo bdp-83. Ayre only uses Oppo 83's disc drive (disc transport mechanism), Oppo's chassis, Oppo's video processing board & video clock, Oppo's firmware & GUI & OSD & possibly Oppo's remote. That's it. Everything else was Ayre all the way. Ayre built & designed its own power supplies, power supply caps, regulator, voltage regulator, USB input implementation design, audio clock, DAC, DAC implementation & configuration, digital filters, analog output buffer, analog audio output stages, etc.
The only things you will find inside the Ayre DX-5 are Oppo's disc transport mechanism (disc drive) & Oppo's video processing board & Oppo's video clock but not the audio clock. They share the same platform (chassis).
Ayre wasn't the only one that used Oppo's disc transport & Oppo's video processing board, firmware, GUI & OSD. Some other high end hifi manufacturers also do the same with their universal bluray disc players. Theta, EMC, MSB Technology, and McIntosh MVP901, which uses the same Mediatek based video processing platform as the Oppo 105. The McIntosh MVP901 uses same disc transport mechanism, HDMI & video processing board, video clock and all the way to HDMI output transmitters as that of the Oppo 105/103. Both the Mac MVP901 & the Oppo 105/103 also share the same menu setups, GUI, OSD. Except on the main menu on the MVP901 says McIntosh instead of Oppo.