NAD T585 review

Even its high-end players are a bargain

The T585 is well equipped with the kind of bells and whistles you might expect from this kind of player

TechRadar Verdict

Takes NAD's excellent top-end Masters Series and drops it into a more affordable, classically designed frame. An impressive mid-priced all-rounder

Pros

  • +

    An impressively well thought-through design

  • +

    Well built, with exceptional video quality

  • +

    Powerful and authoritative CD/DVD-Audio sound

  • +

    Well above average SACD performance

Cons

  • -

    NAD livery arguably looks a bit tired

  • -

    Remote handset lacks backlighting and punch-through controls

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This new 'universal' disc player from classic 'budget specialist' NAD is a serious solution to a serious set of requirements, and consequently it costs proper, serious money. £800 is several times the price of a typical budget universal player, though it is still well short of the price of esoteric high-end models.

What you get here starts life as a slightly simplified, bargain-price variant of the NAD Masters Series M55 universal player. This is broadly in Arcam DV137 territory for quality, flexibility and price - they both cost around £1,300. In common with virtually all universal players, the T585 starts life as a DVD-Video player, which can also play CD (of course), DVD-Audio and SACD. It is also compatible with almost all types of recordable and recorded disc-based media, including WMA, but as usual excluding DVD-RAM.

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