Construction – Sony DVP S9000ES User Manual

Page 17

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17

DVD Technical Notes

Construction

The same insistence on high-performance parts that marks the

video section of the DVP-S9000ES can be found throughout the

audio section, as befits a fully qualified member of Sony’s ES

Series. The parts are selected after undergoing exhaustive

testing. For example, the audio circuit board is a glass epoxy

design that steadfastly resists deformation. The copper foil

traces on the circuit board are twice the normal thickness.

Principal parts are secured with through-hole connections. The

digital circuit is intentionally compact with the shortest practical

leads. High quality electrolytic capacitors are used wherever

they can impact sound. Even the AC power line uses gold

plating for the minimum in contact resistance. The result is

remarkably pure, superbly clean sound.

Vibration is the enemy of DVD players for two powerful

reasons. First, vibration in the disc or optical pickup triggers

unwanted operation in the tracking servos. This can radiate

spurious noise throughout the chassis. And this radiation occurs

in exactly the wrong place — near the sensitive low-level optical

pickup preamplifier. To make matters worse, vibration can also

cause subtle distortions in the audio circuitry. Vibration can have

tiny “microphonic” effects on capacitor values and point-to-point

wiring. While these distortions are not always apparent to the

casual listener, Sony’s design program required performance

without compromise. For all these reasons, the DVP-S9000ES

takes advantage of Sony’s comprehensive anti-resonant design.

It’s one more way the player reflects its dual heritage as a top

Sony DVD machine and proud member of the ES Series.

The first line of defense against vibration is Sony’s Frame and

Beam (FB) chassis. In this design, the thick, high-strength

chassis frame gains additional strength from a horizontal beam.

The back panel and main parts use 1.6 mm thick sheet metal

while the bottom plate is 2 mm thick. The chassis corners

benefit from stiffening boards that add strength and diffuse the

natural resonant frequencies. In this way, materials of different

shapes and thicknesses combine to suppress vibration. In

addition, copper plating on the back panel and bottom help

reduce noise by decreasing the ground potential difference.

To prevent shelf-borne vibration from entering the chassis, Sony’s

insulator feet locate the screw hole off center. Varying the radius

from screw to perimeter tends to vary the resonant frequency

within the foot — diffusing one potential path for vibration.

The DVP-S9000ES marks the debut of an all-new drive mechanism

of unusual design. On a conventional DVD drive, the spindle,

drive motor and optical pickup are mounted on a pivoting base

unit. The pivot is necessary because the base unit needs to drop

out of the way when the disc drawer is opening and closing. And

it needs to swing back up into playing position once a disc has

been loaded. Unfortunately, this pivoting mechanism is an open

invitation to vibration and resonance.

Sony engineers

demanded more.

And they developed

the fixed base unit

mechanism. In the

new Sony design,

the spindle, motor

and optical pickup

base unit is rigidly

bolted to a sub-

chassis, to reduce

any possibility of

resonance. When you load a disc into the DVP-S9000ES, the

disc not only moves laterally into the player, it also descends

onto the spindle. Thanks to Sony’s new design, the disc is

always read in a silent, extremely stable non-resonant

environment. Vibration is minimized, along the servo activity

vibration can cause. The sensitive RF preamplifier is protected

from servo radiation.

When it carries the disc down to the fixed base unit, the loading

tray no longer acts like a door to seal the front-panel loading slot.

Sony engineers addressed this by creating a hermetic shutter. It

forms an airtight seal to protect the disc and pickup from airborne

vibration. Even when the speakers in your room are going full

blast, the disc rotates in peace and quiet.

Audiophile Parts

Build Right

Copper-Plated Frame and Beam Chassis

Photo 6: Sony’s copper-plated Frame and Beam (FB) is not only strong. Parts of different

shapes and thicknesses combine to suppress resonance.

Off Center Insulator Feet

New Fixed Base Unit Mechanism

Fig. 20: Conventional DVD players use a pivoting base unit

(top), prone to vibration. The Sony DVP-S9000ES uses a

rigidly fixed base unit (bottom), minimizing vibration and

its consequent distortion.

Hermetic Shutter

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