The Loewe name is synonymous with adventurous design, so it comes as no surprise that its debut Blu-ray player, the Blutech Vision, focuses heavily on the aesthetic.
Available in anthracite or chrome silver, the BluTech Vision is minimalist in design and sports a front panel devoid of any features other than a central porthole.
This spartan approach helps the player become one of the most stylish HD decks around and it also blends in nicely with the company’s existing range of TVs and audio components. The only minor disappointment is that the front panel isn’t motorised like it is on Sony’s BDP-S500.
Profile 1.0 Blu-ray
The BluTech Vision was launched in October 2007 before Profile 1.1 was mandated, which meant that Loewe was under no obligation to make provision for its features. So what we have is a Profile 1.0 deck that can’t play PiP (Picture in Picture), and its inability to be upgraded to 1.1 means it’ll stay that way, too.
On the rear panel is a healthy set of connections, including an HDMI v1.3 socket that can output 1080p pictures at 24fps, as well as Dolby True HD, DTS HD and Dolby Digital Plus bitstreams.
However, the latter sound formats cannot be output from the analogue outputs, which means you can only enjoy them if you own an HDMI-equipped receiver with the relevant decoding.
Sadly the Loewe doesn’t support DTS HD Master Audio at all, but there’s always the chance its firmware could be upgraded in the future using the USB service socket on the rear.
Disc compatibility
Format compatibility is poor, as it refused to play any of our homeburned discs containing MP3, WMA or DiVX files.
It will, however, play BD-R/-RE, most recordable DVD formats and CD-R/-RW. The deck upscales to 720p, 1080i and 1080p, which gives a definite boost to the quality of a DVD collection.
Sluggish operation
In our experience, Loewe products can be tricky to use and, in places, the BluTech Vision displays these traits.
The menu system is well laid out but sluggish to navigate, and the Loewe Assist remote control is littered with puzzling buttons. It is, however, one of the most elegant zappers we’ve encountered, made from aluminium and with keys that give a satisfying click.

