Philips DVDR3576H DVD Recorder
Philips DVDR3576H DVD Recorder with 160GB Hard Disc and Built-In Tuner
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List Price: $329.99 Sale Price: Too low to display. Availability: unspecified
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Product Description
Benefit from the convenience of recording directly onto a 160 GB hard disk with this Philips DVDR3576H DVD recorder. To keep something longer, simply record your selected programs onto a DVD to enjoy a lifetime of high quality videos.
Details
- Record all your favorite movies, music & TV programs. Play any media format you want - DivX, MP3s, WMA or JPEGs.
- Bring video to life, 1080p HDMI upconverts to high definition for sharper images with progressive scan component video for optimized image quality.
- Convenient programming-timer enhancements; daily-weekly repeat programs, manual timer, one touch recording, 12 programmable events
- i.Link carries all audio and video signals via a single cable digitally, with no loss in picture and sound quality.
- Included Accessories: 2 x AAA Batteries, Quick start guide, Remote Control, User Manual, A/V Cable, RF antenna cable.
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Rating
This excellent unit is truly powerful and capable. It’s a real bargain if its price does not climb (see paragraph 3). It combines 3 different functions in one slim package, any one of which alone would have cost more than its sub-$300 price not so long ago: a 160 GB hard disk recorder, an ATSC digital tuner (and an analog NTSC tuner too), and a DVD recorder. Additionally, it breaks the DVD +/- format war by its ability to record on both.
This unit is one of the surprisingly few hard disk-plus-DVD recorder devices available today that has a digital tuner. It eliminates the high cost of monthly charges for a TIVO. No monthly charges at all! It can do two things at once, allowing playback from either DVD or HDD while recording to HDD. It has a fan but it’s quiet, and turns off about a minute after turning the unit off. And, of course, you can watch live TV via your TV’s tuner as well.
NOTE ON PRICES: In 2009 the Philip’s price has increased, sometimes substantially above what it was last year, although you may still find it at a good price. It may be in limited quantities and/or about to be deleted: I do not know. If you can only find it at an elevated price you should also consider other units. Gary S. reports recently that the newly-available Magnavox H2160MW9, now at Amazon too, is essentially identical to the Philips and is at a sub-$300 price, so investigate that. At higher prices, there are other units that, unlike this otherwise excellent Philips, can record in high definition instead of standard def (albeit on hard drive only): the Moxi MR 1500 (for cable only, cannot be used with an antenna; 500 GB hard drive); or the TiVo TCD658000 HD XL DVR (for both cable and antenna; 1000 GB hard drive). TiVo imposes service charges, unlike Moxi or Philips, so the HD XL effectively costs about $900 for the unit + “lifetime” service fee. However, unlike the Philips, both Moxi and TiVo need an adjunct DVD recorder in order to download keeper programs to a DVD (in SD not HD, at least until Blu-Ray recorders are available). Otherwise you lose your recordings if/when the hard disk crashes.
Recording TV programs
I use a roof antenna, and receive both analog and digital TV signals. Programming to record TV shows is very similar to programming a VCR manually. There is no automatic programming system, but it’s really not that hard to do manually. It records HD signals as SD (standard definition).
The listing of programs (“Titles”) that you have recorded are clearly shown and easy to navigate to. But it is best to put at least a rudimentary title on the TV programs right after you record them. Otherwise all you have is the date, time, and channel of the recording. You have to add titles by a clunky texting method, requiring multiple presses of numbers 1-9.
Playback
I use an HDMI cable between this unit and my TV. Playback from the hard disk is a joy. Access is immediate. The unit remembers where you left off watching last time on each program individually. You can manoever around the recordings with an (adjustable) 30-second skip forward/backward button, or with an adjustable-speed fast forward/rewind, or with a chapter-jump (“next”) which uses the (optional) 10-minute auto-chapters that are inserted.
Playback from DVD is fine, but loading a DVD is slow (perhaps because it can handle so many different DVD formats).
Aspect Ratio (edited 12/08–thanks to Arnold E.)
This will require fiddling with from time to time to display the picture properly.
When recording DIGITAL programs you get 16:9 playback with very good SD definition on a widescreen TV with the following settings: Setup/General/Video/TV Aspect/16:9. AND set the “HDMI” toggle button to 1080p (or 1080i if your 16:9 set doesn’t have p). The TV should then choose the correct aspect ratio setting automatically.
If you play back a 4:3 ANALOG program (until June 2009) with these settings, it will play back stretched sideways: reset “HDMI” to 480p to fix this.
AND if you are recording some digital programs which are not broadcast full-screen (e.g. BBC News) you may wish to press ZOOM on your TV to fill the screen.
User-friendliness
Most functions are well thought out and the software is good. But you will have to read the manual.
The remote control has the buttons needed, but several important ones are badly laid out. The STOP button is tiny.
Since it’s a multifunctional device, you have to tell it what component you want to use. If you have been watching a TV show recorded on HDD, and then insert a DVD, if you just press “play”, it will resume playback of the HDD unless you press “DVD” first. It’s not smart enough to realize you want the DVD now.
The 122-page instruction book is detailed. It is fairly well written. Mine is very well-thumbed and dogeared. To get the most out of this complex unit, you will need to read it carefully.
Editing
For copying from old VHS tapes or home DVD’s, I find it best to record first onto the HDD. Then use “deleting a scene” to remove unwanted sections. The software for this is pretty user-friendly. Then transfer the cleaned-up version to DVD. You can in theory record directly to DVD from VHS, and delete unwanted sections on the DVD directly, using “Hiding Chapters” but this is clunky (first you have to define the section as a chapter). Worse, these deletions, and added chapter headings, were ignored when played back on another unit.
Upsides
An excellent, low-cost, way to record digital and analog programs over the air or on cable.
No monthly fee.
Good quality SD 16:9 recordings.
Versatile: able to transfer recordings either way between DVD and HDD.
Downsides
It can’t record HD programs in HD–it downgrades them to SD.
It’s slow to load a DVD.
The remote buttons are poorly laid out.
Titling tracks is tedious.
DVD edits may be ignored in other DVD players.
Summary
This is a really fine and extremely versatile unit, at a good price. It is a leapfrog into the digital age. Finally here is a device with the versatility to fully supplant S-VHS VCR’s.
The next step will be when this kind of device is upgraded to record HDTV on its hard disk AND to record Blu-Ray DVD’s. Don’t hold your breath.
(This review is based on the predecessor model, DVDR3575H, similar except for the tuner).
Rating
I wish I had more time to write this review about the Philips DVDR3576H/37. Other reviews have sometimes found fault with some or many aspects of this machine. I’ve had this DVR/HD combo for 9 months and it has worked flawlessly. The only issue that I agree with from other reviews is that changing the title of a recorded program on the hard drive is rather tedious. So I don’t bother. I just start the recording with the banner description of the TV show or movie and that is how I tell them all apart. Pretty low tech and it works. I use this unit with DirecTV and the timer programming is thus pretty simple. Electronics are my toys, and this is the best toy I’ve purchased in a long time. My TV is a 52 inch Sony 1080p/120 Hz and the recorded material looks fantastic. I hope people will keep buying this unit so Philips will keep investing money to make it better and better.
Rating
I bought one 2 months ago and liked it so much I bought a second one, so I can record programs from 2 channels at the same time.
I don’t like to pay a monthly fee for anything, so I have always just set VCR’s to record off the antenna by timer. But that won’t work after February. What nobody tells you is that the converter box will not let you do that, because the channel selection is in the converter, not in the VCR. So this DVR is the solution, and it’s the only one out there, unless you pay a monthy fee for cable and something like TiVo.
For timer recording, it is even more convenient than a VCR. You can just set and delete events at will, and don’t have to worry about what fits on a tape. By default it shows the date, time, and channel for each event. I keep a separate log on a piece of paper, and that saves the time to label each event on the disc. I usually delete an event after I watch it anyway.
I use it with a 52″ Sony HDTV, so I can evaluate the picture quality. At EP speed it will record 132 hours on the hard drive, and the quality is similar to the VCR at EP speed. But it has the advantage of wide screen picture and surround sound. But it has the distinct disadvantage that it won’t record closed captioning. That is a problem for us with TV programs made in the last 5 years or so, because the dialog is garbled and drowned out by unnecessary music. It wouldn’t be a problem if the TV industry would clean up their act.
What is really notable is the picture quality as affected by the tuner and the connection to the TV. A picture that is tuned by this DVR and then sent to the TV by way of either the HDMI cable or component video cables is not as clear as the same picture tuned directly by the TV. What’s even more interesting is that the HDMI cable makes a poorer picture than component video cables, even though HDMI is claimed to be the ultimate.
Some day we may have blu-ray recorders, but until that time comes, I think this is an excellent unit.