
Philips DVDR3355
| PCW Rating | Good: 74 |
| Performance | Good |
| Image quality | Good |
| Remote | Good |
| Interface | Good |
| On-disc editing | Good |
| Write formats | DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW |
| Hard drive | No |
| Inputs | One antenna, two composite, S-Video, FireWire |
| Outputs | One antenna, one composite, one S-Video, one coaxial digital audio |
| VCR Plus+ | Yes |
| Electronic program guide | None |
| One-touch recording | Yes |
| Time shifting: Ability to pause and resume playback of live television during recording. | No |
| Record modes | 1, 2, 4, and 6 hours |
| Other supported formats | MP3, JPEG, MPEG4, DiVX |
| Parts warranty | One-year warranty |
| Design & usability | Good |
| Design/usability comments | Sensibly designed remote puts commonly used controls under the thumb (but fast forward/rewind share space with the chapter forward/back button). On-screen menus are easy to use. |
Philips DVDR3355
DVDR3355 Review, by Melissa Perenson November 30, 2005
Even though Philips is one of the companies behind the DVD+R format, the DVDR3355 can record to DVD-R/RW discs as well as to DVD+R/RW. This gesture toward detente in the DVD wars doesn't seem to have extended to the manual, however: While DVD+R receives extensive coverage, DVD-R is mentioned only in the specifications section.
The DVDR3355 is also the only no-hard-drive DVD recorder we reviewed for our January 2006 roundup that can play both DivX and other types of MPEG-4 files, a huge plus if you want to play videos that you downloaded from the Internet or encoded yourself using those formats. On the other hand, it doesn't support the recently released Divx 6.0 format or Divx HD.
We found the image quality of recorded video adequate but not impressive. Colors looked rather dull, and the lack of shadow detail made the video seem somewhat gloomy and flat. But details were well reproduced: We saw few compression artifacts and little dithering. Recorded video was a pleasure to watch, though not as good as the video recorded by Samsung's DVD-VR325 and DVD-TR520.
One big omission: There's no easy way to edit video. The unit cannot remove a section of video (such as a commercial break) without defining chapter points at the beginning and end and then deleting the chapter. This process is significantly more labor-intensive than the A-B editing that many other players offer.
No other hard-drive-less recorder we looked at supports VCR Plus+ codes. Naturally, that feature makes scheduling recordings much easier: Instead of entering the time and date of a program, you just enter the broadcast's three- to six-digit VCR Plus+ code (you can find these in the newspaper or online through TV Guide). The recorder works out the time, date, and channel from the code.
We found the DVDR3355 easy to control, with a small but well-designed remote. Although most of the keys are the same size, the most commonly used ones (such as play, record and the directional keys of the on-screen menu) fall naturally under the thumb and are relatively easy to find by touch.
At $250, the DVDR3355 costs significantly less expensive than most of the recorders we tested at the same time. The CyberHome DVD1600 is cheaper, but the Philips is far easier to use; and the vendor's inclusion of VCR Plus+ codes makes this model a good replacement for an aging VHS deck.
Upshot: Its image quality is average, but this recorder is attractively priced and easy to use, with support for VCR Plus+ recording codes.
Melissa Perenson
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Review Now! Already own it? Tell us What You Think
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Reviewed by: smarkham604
Strengths: Plays nearly any thing: Divx, Xvid, avi, jpeg, mp3, DVD-R, DVD+RW, CD-R, CD-RW, the list goes on
Weaknesses: Slow boot-up time. Tiny remote buttons, not very intuitive. Menu's seem clunky.
Overall: I purchased this unit to replace my dying VCR. It seems to be the recording sibling of the Philips 642, the de-facto machine on the market to play anything you choose to pop in the tray. This is not the unit for you if you are into a great deal of time-shifting. However, it's great for the occasional recording of TV OTA broadcasts. The picture quality of HD broadcasts looks slightly less than the progressive output of a commercial DVD. If you can set-up your VCR to time record, this unit is a breeze. I had to exchange this unit, thinking it was defective. However, I now believe it was a feedback/cross-talk issue using the cheesy connection cables that come with the unit, making colors shift and the video to jump. Even with better shielded cables, the recorded image sent back to the TV is slightly shifted to the right. It's more apparent if the TV station broadcasts grey or other colored sidebars with 4:3 content. The biggest gripe I have with this unit (easily fixable by Philips with a firmware update) is choosing the video source to record. Part of the initial set-up is choosing a default input to record. Seems like an oxymoron to be required punch several buttons on the remote when you choose the input yet again with "One Touch Recording"? What's the point of choosing a default input in the first place? To add insult to injury, if you are not monitoring the input you are planning to record, you must rely on the front panel display to determine what input it will record. You cannot directly choose the input, you must scroll through each of the three front inputs (S-Video, Composite, and DV) and each of the two rear inputs (S-video, and Composite). You must blindly press the input button, and have the sequence memorized since all the panel displays is "Front" or "Rear". It shouldn't be too terribly difficult to program the display to scroll through with something like "Front-S" Front-C" and "Front-D" and so on since there are enough characters in the display: It pulses "Philips" during boot-up. All in all, it's an easy machine to operate, looks good, and plays nearly everything. UPDATE 2/12/06-So, I now have the fourth unit, thanks to the generous return policy of the retailer. After several calls to Philips, I can now confirm the first three units were indeed defective. The worst problem being the color shifting during recording and playback. Under optimum viewing conditions, the best I can describe, seemed as if someone off camera was erraticallly switching an overhead light bulb on and off. It was most apparent during darker scenes. I had eliminated all possible causes except this recorder: better cables, different media, different input/outputs, I even bought a new LCD TV! The playback would improve slightly after the unit was on for more than 24 hours. This thermal issue I believe is due to a cold solder-joint on some decoder chip, whatever...A manufacturing date is embedded in the serial number: NW000527000xxxxx The "05" being the year, and "27" being the week of the year. As it turned out, all the units with the problems were 0527 models (the first one was earlier, but I did not take note of the serial number). A sales clerk was nice enough over the phone at another location of the retailer to tell me their serial numbers on the units they did have in stock, before I drove to the next town to exchange it. I wound up with a 0544 unit (October 2005), and all the color shifting problems are gone. This unit has different hardware and software that the level one tech at Philips was not aware of. I noticed the printed circuit board visible through the bottom holes looked different, and my biggest complaint (above regarding the vague information of the front display)has been addressed, abeit cryptically at best. Rather than blindly scrolling through "front, front, front, rear, rear" to determine the recording source, the newer version says "cam1, cam2, dv, r vcbs, r-y/c". Better, not by much.The best way to determine which unit has the newer hardware and software is to set the output to progressive scan. The very small words "pro scan" show up in the front display. This was not on the earlier units. I just noticed my rating "would purchase again" hehehe...yea like four times....
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