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Home >> Panasonic DMR-E55K Progressive-Scan DVD Recorder/Player (Black)

Panasonic DMR-E55K Progressive-Scan DVD Recorder/Player (Black)
List Price: $349.99
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Sales Rank: 1390


Features:
  • Records DVD-R, DVD-RAM for best of both worlds; plays DVD-Video, DVD-R, DVD-RAM, CD-R/RW, and MP3 CD
  • Up to 16 hours on a double-sided 9.4 GB DVD-RAM disc; up to 8 hours on a single-sided 4.7 GB DVD-RAM or DVD-R
  • Offers one-touch record, TimeSlip, chasing playback (watching a recording in progress from the beginning), on-disc video editing
  • Progressive-scan video output for seamless, flicker-free picture on high-definition and HD-ready televisions
  • Measures 16.9 x 3.125 x 11.2 inches (W x H x D)

  • Customer Reviews
    Average Rating: 4.45 out of 5 stars

    Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Best of the under $300.00 class
    I just ordered one of these last week to transfer/archive my ever growing pile of 8mm & Hi8 to DVD. The picture quality of the copies are great, even on 4hr mode. A couple of hints which the manual does not cover very well. When recording to DVD-R, which has few editing options compared to DVD-RAM, use "stop" to break the recording into separate "titles"- otherwise you will get one long title broken into 5 minute segments which don't appear on the title navigator (menu) as separate thumbnails. The other hint, especially on dubbing, is to make a (-R) copy first. After finalizing, use this as your master. Play it from another DVD player to your recorder and edit in real time by "pausing" out unneeded material or "stop" for title breaks. On (-RAM) just let it run and go back later to edit it. Use the edited (-RAM) as your archive, to view off the Panasonic machine, or run another (-R) copy for use on a standard player. If you are looking to make multiple copies, or do extensive editing of the master, you might want to spend the extra $300.00 for an internal hardrive machine. This unit will handle all your typical VCR needs and basic dubbing at a reasonable price.



    Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - GREAT recorder in the low price class
    I'm overall very pleased with the picture quality. The variable bit rate encoding is just terrific and the source filtering does quite a good job on ugly VHS tape sources. An especially useful feature is an adjustable quality mode. You tell it how long, like a 2 hour 18 minute movie, and it records with the maximum quality that will just fill the disk. The ability to edit when using DVD-R media is extreemly limited. All disks get a standard menu format with slots for half a dozen titles per page. You can set the preview thumbnail and the title name. On DVD-R media you can't set chapters or edit out anything (like commercials). Chapters are automatically created about on 5 minute boundries, or if you press pause during recording. A title is created each time you press record. After recording a DVD-R, you need to run a finalization process which makes the disk compatable with most DVD players and prevents any further writing. You can set the disk, before finalizing, to play the first title, bypassing the menu (which may only have one title on it). The device does not write to DVD-RW, DVD+R or DVD+RW media. DVD-RAM media (either with or without a protective case) can be used, and greatly expands the editing capability. Unfortunatly DVD-RAM media is not supported by most DVD players, although it did work in another fairly new Panasonic DVD player I own. DVD-RAM also does not work in many (most?) computer DVD drives. DVD-RAM does allow better than VCR functionality though, but does cost more than a VHS tape (but has better quality that a S-VHS tape). Using DVD-RAM media, it's super easy to cut out commercials or other undesirable material. You can also make playlists which allow assembling sequences of scenes into a new virtual title. You can set scene boundries very easily, just play the video and hit a button on the remote. Using pause/slow allows fairly accurate scene positioning. I can also verify the copy protection system prevented recording when trying to record from a commercial DVD played in another DVD player as a source. This was the case for both DVD-R and the DVD-RAM media I used. Some brands of DVD-RAM are supposed to allow a single copy if the original content producer allowed it, but don't know how you can tell if this should be allowed from a specific source. I record most things from a 3 year old DirecTV TIVO source, instead of using my VCR. If you need to edit content to put on DVD-R media, this is not the machine to get. For serious editing, I use a computer. For cutting out commercial from a weekly TV series you want to keep, one of the DVD recorders with a hard disk might be a better choice, as I assume you can edit before writing to a DVD-R. Tests I've read say DVD-R media is the most compatable with DVD players, so think DVD-R media is the one to use. I have 20 year old VHS tapes, so assume I will collect DVD-R's for 20 years.



    Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Good Buy
    This was a very good thing to get. i just wish that there were 2 of me .it takes along time to get all of my old tapes on DVD. good price but the only thing is that it is too picky about what kinds of blank disc it will record to.you have to be carefull what kinds of blank disc to buy.



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    Panasonic DMR-E55K Progressive-Scan DVD Recorder/Player (Black)