OT: Stand-Alone DVD Recorder Review

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Thomas Rogers

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I have been in the market for a stand-alone DVD recorder for months now. I wanted something for dubbing from our Sony HC30 camcorder, and for backing up shows from our hi-def Motorola 6412 DVR.



I settled on the Sony VRD-MC1, their latest stand-alone recorder. A link to the product on Amazon is below, and here is the review I just submitted to Amazon:



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I just got one of these babies. I am an IT professional and have the PC equipment for burning DVDs and capturing video, but I still felt that I wanted this unit.



The features that appealed to me were:

- 16x write speed

- Sony brand name

- DV input

- Dual Layer burning support

- Stand-alone mode (no PC needed)



I have this hooked up to my home theater. I have an HD setup and a Motorola 6412 Hi-Def DVR. So far I have been able to make excellent copies of kid’s shows from Nick and Cartoon Network, etc, in the SLP format (6 hour record time). Those are GREAT for long trips with the portable DVD player.



I have also made excellent DVDs of my home movies shot with our Sony HC30 digital video camcorder. That's where the DV firewire (IEEE-1394) input comes in handy. You will have to buy a firewire cable if you don't already have one. I needed the 4 to 4 cable that has the mini d-shaped connectors on each end and I got that cheap from my favorite online auction site.



Now if you want to copy old VHS tapes that you have, or make backups of DVR'ed material then you may be out of luck as this unit does do a good job of honoring Macrovision copy protection when it detects it. I have been told there are "digital video stabilizer" like the "SIMA CT-2" (do a Google search) that will clean up the video signal and allow backup of your legally owned and obtained materials, so all is not lost in that area should you want to make backups of your old VHS tapes or make a backup of the Sopranos from your DVR.



Lastly, there are three different inputs: RCA composite video/audio (yellow, red, white plugs), S-Video and DV (firewire). I haven't tried S-Video, only the firewire and composite. If you plan to hook this up to a DVR, like the Mot 6412, getting audio into the device can be a challenge because the Mot 6412 seems to only have optical audio out and this device has no optical audio input. If you have a receiver then you can probably run the audio from one of your outputs (VCR, or TAPE) to the Sony unit, and the video directly from the 6412 to the Sony. That's what I did, and other than some lower than expected but acceptable volume levels on the digital channels all was fine.



Lastly, use good quality media. Don't go cheap. Use Memorex or better yet Sony DVDs. I use the DVD-R format because that's what my stand-alone player supports. When setting up the unit plan on burning and finalizing several DVDs each with material a few minutes long until you get all the cabling and quality settings right and the way you want them, especially if hooking up to a DVR.



I found the preview LCD to be very helpful, but you will have to have the unit close to you and not deep on a shelf or a rack to see it as the angle of viewing requires you almost be over top of the LCD to view it...the next model should have a pop-up tilt screen, IMHO.



Initialization and finalization of a DVD doesn't take that long. The unit is a little loud, but not too much so, and does throw some heat when burning. I suggest putting it in a well-ventilated area. I have mine on top of my home theater rack instead of inside it. It's small footprint and attractive finish, coupled with the fact that I will use this frequently for dubbing from my camcorder made that placement make sense for me.



I hope this review was helpful.







P.S.



I got the recorder off eBay as a new, open package item for $103 (a very good deal, IMHO). The unit was no doubt a<
 
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Nice review TJR. I've been looking at a DVD recorder. I do a lot of DVD recording on my computer but I want one of these for recording old vhs and camcorder home movies I have stockpiled in my closet. This sounds like it would be perfect.
 
You are welcome TomT. I will let you know how the Sima CT-2 addresses the macrovision issue. That's another $50 or so investment off eBay, but I am told theirs is the best for retaining picture quality and removing the Macrovision.



I haven't tried the photo capability of this unit but plan to soon. You plunk in the memory card from your camera and it burns a photo DVD for you. Pretty slick.



TJR
 
Reading some of the reviews on Newegg though, it seems some people are having problems copying from vhs. Of course some of the reviewers problems may be the macrovision and they just don't realize it. I'm not worried about about macrovision or copying store bought vhs movies, just all my home movies. Have you tried copying a vhs home movie?
 
No, I haven't. But I have copied from other source material through the composite inputs (y/r/b), namely my DVR, and that was fine. A video signal is a video signal, and if yours is good it should work. Almost all VCRs have composite out so you should be good.



I will try the VHS dubbing when I get the stabilizer. There are a ton of old Disney films on VHS I would rather not purchase again.



TJR
 
I've got the sima godvd and have not found anything it will not copy. I did a bunch of old home movies plus I always make a copy of any movie I purchase and put the origional away for safe keeping. My family likes to borrow movies and sometimes they get lost in the shuffle. I bought mine from bestbuy.com.
 
TJR,,,,,good review, and very helpful, especaially the info on the sima product. I will search that out, for sure, as that is the only problem I have had with my older version Sony recorder, bought a year ago, but just can't get by that 'block'when it comes to recording something out of the norm. Thanks for all the info,,,,,,,,,Mark
 
Buy.com as the Sima CT-2 aka GoDVD for about $66 delivered. That's only $8 more than the open-package one I just bought on eBay (wish I checked Buy.com first).



TJR
 
I've had an ILO (cheapo) DVD recorder for some time now. I have converted ALL my home movies to DVD. I got a disc off of E-Bay for $8 that "reprograms" the recorder to ignore the copy protection. Of course E-bay pulled the auction and told me I didn't have to pay him, but it worked great and I payed by Paypal so I was happy. If that Sima doesn't work for you TJR, let me know and I'll send you this guys e-mail. He may be able to help ya.;)
 
For anyone interested here is a link to another eBay auction for this stand-alone recorder, from the same seller I got mine from. The seller is very good, I got the item in less than two days (because I am pretty close to Tom's River NJ where the seller is), and the item was in great, like-new condition.



The seller has sold many of these. They retail for around $270, and the auction is currently around $103 with less than 4 hours left (snipe...snipe).



The only thing dicey is that the warranty card you will get, if included, is for Canada at least was the case for the unit I got. I suspect the seller got a lot of these from Canada and is offloading them. I only mention that because registering for the one-year warranty may be difficult if the buyer is in the US.



TJR
 
Update...I got the Sima CT-2 (aka GoDVD) and it works like a charm for recording premium content from the DVR, so I have no reason to assume it wouldn't also work for VHS tapes played from a VCR. Both use Macrovision as their analog copy protection. The Sima CT-2 unit I got off eBay was a Best Buy returned item, originally sold by Best Buy for almost $130. I got it for just over $50. Later folks. Time to make some DVD backups of a whole bunch of Disney tapes and season 3 of Deadwood (I hear that's the LAST season, whah!).



TJR
 
I have a JVC brand DVD recorder that I got free with my plasma tv. It works well recording live satelite, copying from vhs, and copying from camcorder. No problem playing discs on other players once they are finalized. I don't use it that much but I've been pleased. It retailed for about $300 a couple of years ago.
 

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