Panasonic and Sony DVD recorders have VBR recording.It does not have VBR as most people call it but as far as I know no one does.
+ Reply to Thread
Results 31 to 55 of 55
-
-
Originally Posted by DVWannaB
-
Originally Posted by jnk76
We have a DMR-E50.
The good thing is that you can disable it if you want. I leave ours turned on. I captured Starship Troopers 2 - probably the worst macro-block-generating source ..even worse than Event Horizon because of the almost constant flashing lights. The Panny capped it with no blocks ...none. It was then that I fell in love with Hybrid VBR -
The RDR-HX900 also features Time Base Correction, Pre Frame Noise Reduction and Pre-video Equalizer technologies that rebalance and equalize video content before it is recorded onto a DVD, improving the original source content even before the encoding process begins.
In the output phase, the RDR-HX900 recorder employs Frame Noise Reduction, Block Noise Reduction and Video Equalizer technologies combine to produce a richly textured visual rendition while minimizing picture interference caused by background artifacts or distortion.
The new recorder also incorporates proprietary DVD playback technology called Precision Cinema Progressive, which incorporates Pixel-by-Pixel I/P Conversion technology to augment and balance DVD-video elements. -
Originally Posted by zorankarapancevOriginally Posted by CapmasterAll I've got in this world is my balls and my word.....
and I don't break them for no one! -
3. Pioneer DVR-720H (3 stars):
For – Easy to use; slim; well-equipped with editing features;large hard-disk (160GB).
Against – Picture performance just isn’t up tp scratch at this money.
VERIDICT – A reasonable performer in some ways, but both Panasonic and Sony offer you more ability for your cash.
“…but we can’t help but point an accusing finger at the Pioneer’s chief weakness: the picture quality should be a lot better…next to Panasonic and Sony, its picture lacks verve, crispness and richness… It’s such a shame. The DVR-720H scores highly for easy of use and has an extensive array of editing features, but luck of video sparkle, whatever you’re watching, weighs heavily against it. You can buy better.”
It appears that the article is awfully one-sided for a review of "the best dvd recorders". Also, the review for the Pioneer does not match the reviews for the Panasonic or the Sony... maybe the Pioneer's review was... I don't know... fabricated. I'm not screaming conspiracy, but it just seems totally strange to compare three dvd recorders two of which, are over 1000.00 and the third, and apparently worst, of the three is well under that mark. -
Originally Posted by jnk76
-
Originally Posted by jnk76
But, like everything else in this hobby, my opinion of "good" and yours may be two different things, so all advice should be followed up with an "eyes-on" test.
Can you get ahold of a unit to try out over a weekend? If nothing else, buy it, try it, and take it back if you don't like it. A place like Circuit City or Worst Buy would give you no troubles returning it a few days later -
It appears that the article is awfully one-sided for a review of "the best dvd recorders". Also, the review for the Pioneer does not match the reviews for the Panasonic or the Sony... maybe the Pioneer's review was... I don't know... fabricated.
https://www.videohelp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=181157):
https://www.videohelp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=207122&highlight=
I don’t doubt the results… only sometimes it is hard to except them. -
[quote="CapmasterOf course it couldn't compare to a purist's DL of DV, 8-pass encoding, etc. But within reason, it does a pretty damn good job of it.
But, like everything else in this hobby, my opinion of "good" and yours may be two different things, so all advice should be followed up with an "eyes-on" test.
Can you get ahold of a unit to try out over a weekend? If nothing else, buy it, try it, and take it back if you don't like it. A place like Circuit City or Worst Buy would give you no troubles returning it a few days later[/quote]
LMAO........SL 5 passbut agree with your comments. Everyone has a different perception and view of what they see. What looks like a horrible mess of macro blacks to me looks normal to my wife. I actually had to pause it to show her.
Yes I can buy a unit to test out..........I just need to return this Toshiba that I am currently borrowing
The big drawback with panasonic for me is no RW support. I normally think Sony is overpriced but it is a nice feature to support all the formats.All I've got in this world is my balls and my word.....
and I don't break them for no one! -
Originally Posted by gshelley61
The one thing I like about the Toshiba I am borrowing is that even though it has akward menu selection and is a manual driven learning recorder......once I learned the method it was fairly easy to use and is very quick and powerfull for editing. I find it much quicker editing on recorder rather than PC. I was going to get the Pioneer 510 next but may give the Sony a try.All I've got in this world is my balls and my word.....
and I don't break them for no one! -
I am with jnk76. I am going to give the Sony a go and see what happens, maybe early in the new year. Maybe time to give up my TiVo, ReplayTV, FW and USB2 MPEG2 caps.
Note: You guys should check ebay in January/February 2005 for a TiVo, a ReplayTV and a USB2 capture device on sale at a good good price -
I planned to buy a standalone DVD recorder but most of the machines are overpriced and limited in some way, so I will instead be putting together a PC with a Hauppauge WinTV PVR-150 and using software like SageTV or GB-PVR. This means I can install massive hard drives and only burn DVD-R's when I want to keep stuff. Things have moved on a lot in the last couple of years and I think DVD recorders will be a short term thing or just something for people who want simplicity rather than feature rich techy stuff.
-
Originally Posted by Ego_Shredder
Burning video to a standalone recorder will remain a modest niche. People who only want to time-shift or temporarily store programs will be happier with their TIVOs and all the other hard drive recorder options. People who are making home movies with their DV camcorders will be happier with their computers that can do exciting editing to spruce the dull video. Only people who want to build libraries of recorded TV programs or to transfer their VHS and Laserdisc collections will find a standalone DVD recorder to be the best solution.
As for me, I love not having to tie up my computer with routine video work. That's both a convenience and a time savings that I'm happy to pay for. -
If I could get my computer to spew out the desired results, I may not have bought a standalone.
The PC stuff is endless. I spent $250 on Pinnacle Deluxe 8 w/capture unit. Out of sync audio/video (P4 Dell, 568mb memory, Ultra ATA, yada, yada). Ran end-it-all and countless othe things to get it to work. No soap. So I Spend another $90 on Pinnacle 9 (the capture device is proprietary). Still No soap. So now I'm supposed to buy another capture device and new software?
Nope. Press the record button on the stand alone and start the camorder. Problem solved. -
"zorankarapancev" The sony DVD recorder can not divide MPEG2 files. This is one big down fall on this unit and no FR mode.
There is alot of Info right here for the Sony DVD recorder
http://www.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=463155
Please take in consideration that, as being discussed in other forums (namely AVFORUM), Sony HX-900 and HX-1000 don't have this 2 features (for european market, but i would suspect the same is true for US market):
- Divide title function on HDD
- Flexible recording (control the recording quality by bit rate or by duration - time)
These are considered major week points for these recorders.
The firts means that if you do a recording of a 2 hrs program in HQ mode (1 hr / DVD), just because you want the best quality for this in particular, you can not copy half to one DVD and the other half to other DVD !
The second means that if you intend to record a show that has 2h01m you have to use LP mode (3 hrs mode) wich actually shouldn't give you a very nice Picture Quality !
Both these are merely examples. It's the same principle for all the other recording modes.
Hope that helps -
- Divide title function on HDD
- Flexible recording (control the recording quality by bit rate or by duration - time)
I hope that Sony engineers will read this posting. -
According to the info on this page: http://www.crutchfield.com/S-9pRL5c8KgP0/cgi-bin/ProdView.asp?g=116500&I=158RDRHX9H the sony model is made for DVD in region 1 only. Does that mean that my home made DVDs will not play on this?
If you do not learn from someone's knowledge and experience, then you are doing it the hard way -
nope... it will play regon 1 and region ALL as all DVD Recorders sold in US. Home made DVD's are authored with region ALL (also known as 0)
Pinnacle Studio 8 and DV home video editing (ver.9 already home) -
Originally Posted by zorankarapancev
This morning while I was working around the house I decided to test it.
I set the the timer for 2hours and 30 minutes then I selected record mode to on. It recorded for 2 hours and 30 minutes. I did the same thing with my Pioneer unit and I will post the specs later on for comparison. I will also record something for 1 hour and 45 or 50 minutes to see what I get. -
tommyoz,
Will you do this test:
Record 2 hours and 15 minutes and see the recorded side of the DVD disc. Find out if the whole disc is recorded or if there is some space left as an unrecorded portion. Also see which recording mode will be chosen (SP or LP) during the recording. -
zorankarapancev,
Yes, I did realize this after I made the recordings. I first recorded on RW which you can't tell. I proceeded to waste a DVD-R and noticed that it did not record the whole DVD. What it did was just jump to the next recording mode. Hence the name recording mode, my bad. -
Originally Posted by spiderman2k1
Really shame on SonyEspecially when their top competitors are offering this. Time to look at the Panny E95 and JVC MH30 again
-
Originally Posted by DVWannaB
Similar Threads
-
Low market for printable CD/DVD printers
By cowboyup910 in forum Off topicReplies: 4Last Post: 12th Nov 2011, 23:50 -
Do you see a Blu-ray DVD recorder in the market?
By coody in forum DVD & Blu-ray RecordersReplies: 24Last Post: 4th Sep 2010, 17:29 -
converting to AVI or mp4 with stand alond dvd recorder..speed test
By diablo_ogre in forum Newbie / General discussionsReplies: 1Last Post: 20th Jul 2008, 09:55 -
Market Share BlueRay\HD Versus SD DVD
By wulf109 in forum DVD & Blu-ray PlayersReplies: 1Last Post: 28th Feb 2008, 17:59 -
New DVD recorders trickling out on the market
By DVWannaB in forum DVD & Blu-ray RecordersReplies: 0Last Post: 17th May 2007, 15:47