Subscribe to Sound & Vision
Print Subscription
Digital Subscription
Give a Gift
Renew My Subscription

Free Newsletter
Sign up for the Free Newsletter
 
Sound & Vision Online
  Search
Go

  « PreviousMore DVD Players & Recorders (Article 2 of 57)Next »  

Burning Desire

Three new spins on the modern DVD recorder

by David Ranada • Photos By Tony Cordoza • February 2006

0602_burningdesire400

Like swimmers in some Darwinian gene pool, DVD recorders are quickly mutating to fill every possible niche. Yet as they evolve, you can count on finding a core set of features in most decks — a TV tuner, a VCR-style timer, and a handful of recording “modes” that let you trade picture quality for playback time. Of course, progressive component-video outputs and compatibility with MP3 music and JPEG photo files are also standard.

What We Think
Lite-On
LVW-1105HC
Samsung
DVD-TR520
RCA
DRC8060N
It's short on editing chops and lacks a display, but this budget deck still does most everything else as well as any other recorder. High-speed dubbing aside, its edit functions are less than elegant and its two disc trays less useful than you might think. Effective commercial zapping and unusually good progressive-scan video quality prove to be a winning combination.

The three recorders tested here are all fairly basic models, with only manual recording (no VCR Plus+ programming, much less an onscreen programming guide) and no infrared “blaster” to control your cable box. But along with the core feature set described above, each offers its own unique twist. Lite-On’s LVW-1105HC ($129) boasts a remarkably low price, and though it lacks the traditional front-panel readout, it remains a very capable recorder. RCA has the first DVD recorder we’ve seen with an upconverting HDMI digital video output, the DRC8060N ($300), which also includes an outstanding commercial-skip feature. And Samsung’s take on DVD copying has led to the first dual-tray recorder, the DVD-TR520 ($450).

Regardless of its bells and whistles, we look for any DVD recorder to do two things well. One is to let you easily edit out commercials in your recordings. The other is to commit those recordings to disc with good video quality. Let’s see how this trio accomplished those tasks.



Burning Desire
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 Next »

 

Related Sound & Vision Articles:

« Q&A - July/August, 2007

   7/9/2007

« Your Guide to High-End Accessories

   7/8/2007

« Sonance C4630 SE Home Audio Distribution System

   7/6/2007

« The Custom Installer: Distributing Audio for Audiophiles

   7/17/2007

« NuVision 52LEDLP 52-inch 1080p DLP HDTV

   7/6/2007


Related Topics:

« Technology

« Science and Technology

« Electronics

« DVD Players

« Consumer Electronics