jeg har nå anskaffet en pioneer ld-4300 som jeg fikk på finn. en industrispiller! med rgb ut og rs232 bygd som en tanks. grunnen til min laserdisc nysgjerrighet er pga jeg aldri hvert noen vhs fan men er glad i gamle klassiske tegneserier og div du ikke får på vhs eller er vanskelig og finne på nett og. bilde kvaliteten på 4300 er som så. lyden er derimot mye bedre en vhs ut i fra analog delen på denne 4300. den har ikke digital ut. men her trenger man det faktisk ikke. god nok analog ut i maskinen. holder for og spinne noen gamle klassikere

er et et klipp og lim fra et laserdisc forum.
PROS:
LINEAR MOTOR! Like the Pioneer HLD-X0! - no more broken belts!
"Pure" laserdisc player - not compatible with CD/CDVideo.
Plays everything - late 1970's GM disc too, so I suppose no problems with DiscoVision.
Single Side Play - less mechanical parts in movement, less things to eventually fix.
No digital frills - image a lot more analog than recent models.
Dual-standard (PAL/NTSC) with pure output - no conversion from NTSC to PAL.
BNC and RCA composite out - the former is the best composite connection available.
RGB out - could be handy in some occasion.
Built like a tank - it will outlast me, you, and everyone else...
RS-232C Serial Port for computer interface - perfect for LD games like Dragon's Lair.
EFM Out - could be used as LD-ROM with the right interface.
Fairly Quiet Operation - no side change, no big noises.
CONS:
No digital out - neither PCM/DTS nor AC3.
No remote included - but compatible with most Pioneer's other models remotes.
Single Side Play - you should leave your couch to turn the side...
CONCLUSION:
This is one of the most underestimated laserdisc player in the world; but it's heavy, it's really well built, it plays only laserdiscs, with a oversized LINEAR motor - similar to the one inside the Pioneer HLD-X0; really few players has it, and it's capable to pass from the beginning to the end of a CAV disc in less than 5 seconds! Ideal as LD-ROM player too, as it has the EFM out - decoder needed, perfect to use with laserdisc games.
Plays practically every kind of disc, even the most ancient; the only major downside is the lack of digital audio - altough probably could be extracted from the EFM out; if someone could find a way to do it, it will climb the list of the preferred laserdisc player for many of us, I'm sure!