Region Hack Samsung Bd C6500 Owners

Posted on by
Region Hack Samsung Bd C6500 Owners Average ratng: 7,0/10 31votes
Samsung Bd C6500Region Hack Samsung Bd C6500 Owners Manual

Learn more about the Samsung BD-C6500 before you decide to buy. Download User Guide and Manual.

This device is sold in Australia as a locked region 4 DVD and region B Blue-ray player. There is no current procedure for unlocking the Blue-ray and it is probably not necessary because over 80% of released disks are region free anyway. (Just don't ever buy the other 20% and they will get the message soon enough!) To change the DVD from region 4 (Pacific/Australia) to region 9 (region free) follow these steps using the remote control. (Adapted from for Australian conditions). Ensure that there is no disk in the tray.

Switch the player off and then back on. This is necessary to clean-boot the firmware. Wait until the main menu page appears and the player stops doing anything. Press the eject button to open the tray. (The button is between the 'Power' and 'TV Power' buttons at the top of the controller.) 5. Press the eject button to close the tray.

Wait while the player searches for a disk. As soon as the 'No Disk' message appears at the top left corner do the following. Press the REPEAT button – just above the TV channel selector at the bottom right of the controller. Enter 7 6 8 8 4 on the number pad. The region code '4' should appear at the top left corner of the screen.

Enter a '9' to make the player region free. (Enter a region code if you want to lock the player to another region for some obscure or perverse reason.) 12. Power down and power up again. Play a foreign DVD to verify the change. Now the tricky bits. This process is timing dependent.

Firstly, you must start entering the code just after the 'No Disk' message is shown and before the message disappears. If you jump the gun or miss the boat (isn't English great!) it won't work. Secondly, the REPEAT key is part of the code.

All six keys must be entered smoothly as 'REPEAT 7 6 8 8 4'. The entry gets timed out so you can't stop in the middle and restart. Don't bash away like crazy, just do it smoothly and briskly. If you don't see the '4' the first time, don't worry. Just repeat the process. It took me about a dozen tries before I got it to work.

I can't guarantee that this player does not have a region change counter so I would be a bit careful about changing regions back and forth. I also can't guarantee that this will work with all released firmware. Buku Ajar Fisiologi Kedokteran Ganong Pdf Writer. Samsung seems to take this crazy region bastardry very seriously for some reason. For people from other parts of the world, all region codes are as follows 1 – 2 9 3 3 4 2 – 5 7 5 3 8 3 – 5 6 7 3 2 4 – 7 6 8 8 4 5 – 5 3 8 1 4 6 – 2 4 4 6 2. It played quite a few different region 1 and region 2 discs as well as regular region 4's. It may have been that the 'region encoding' was just boxware.

Ie – While labelled on the box, the disc itself was open to one or more regions. I used to live in Chile, and most the DVDs sold there were labelled 'Region 4' (NTSC), but were usually the same pressings as the US and were open to Region 1 as well. Also some PAL discs are Region 2 (for UK) and region 4 (for Aus), but only labelled as one or the other. I found the procedure llama1910 described worked on my Australian BD-C5500. With no disc in the tray, type: REPEAT 7 6 8 8 4 ( or your corresponding region number ) Region 4 is displayed Type: REPEAT 9 9 will now be displayed in the top left corner as the set region. Bear in mind that most DVDs are not really locked to their region.

For example, I have quite a few UK 'Region 2' DVDs and nearly all have played on my various DVD players when set to Region 4. Same for most of my US DVDs. You will get some locked to their region.

An example is the US special edition of 'From The Earth To The Moon' which will not play on Region 4. Setting the player to 'Region 0' (or 9 in the case of the BD-C5500) avoids this problem. And of course, this only applies to DVDs. Blu-Rays are a different story. PAL vs NTSC is not really the same as region-coding and is generally a non-issue as most modern TVs and most players handle both formats Can anyone shed light on whether there is a hardware/firmware limitation on the number of times you can switch regions on the BD-5500, as with PC DVD drives?