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Panasonic DMR-EH50S DVD Recorder

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Panasonic DMR-EH50S DVD Recorder Review

by Melissa Perenson

This DVD recorder provides excellent image quality and includes an SD Card slot for still images.

A svelte DVD recorder with a 100GB hard drive, Panasonic's DMR-EH50S impresses on many levels. In our tests, it produced excellent videos recordings with bright, vivid colors that made events like explosions look extremely realistic. Images also showed great contrast, with deep blacks to go along with those vivid colors. The motion of the video was smooth and lacked the compression artifacts that we saw on some other recorders.

Like most other recorders we reviewed for our January 2006 roundup, this model uses the easy-to-navigate TV Guide On Screen program guide. You don't have to connect to a phone line or Internet connection to receive it, because the guide is transmitted alongside the TV signal. To set it up, you leave the recorder turned off for a day while connected to an over-the-air antenna or cable service; the guide automatically downloads the eight-day schedule and refreshes itself as needed.

TV Guide On Screen lets you schedule a recording by selecting a program from the grid; you can choose a single recording or you can record at the same time every day or week. Nevertheless, it isn't as flexible as the TiVo service: You can't use TV Guide On Screen to schedule recordings of every episode of a show (such as every episode of The Simpsons, regardless of channel), or to record only new episodes. Ads that support the TV Guide service occupy nearly a third of the screen, and squeezing the grid into the remaining space means that you can see only a couple of hours ahead on the program guide.

The remote control is thoughtfully designed: Buttons for commonly used functions such as play, stop, fast-forward, and rewind, have different colors from the others and are larger, which helps them fall naturally under the user's thumb. The remote has an innovative touch, too: Instead of working with the standard directional keys, you scroll through menus via a rotating wheel (rather like the one on an iPod).The unit's on-screen menu is easy to use, but its small text and preview windows for editing video may be difficult to read if you use it on a small TV.

The 100GB hard drive, while not the largest we saw, is big enough to hold a good chunk of video--up to 177 hours in the lowest quality mode. A nice touch: If you're recording direct to DVD and the disc doesn't have enough space for a scheduled recording, the unit will automatically record your program on the hard drive.

The DMR-EH50S copied programs from the hard drive to DVD briskly: We clocked it at just over 6 minutes, for a 1-hour TV program. The recorder is among the most versatile in this group: It can write to DVD-R, -RW, +R, and +RW discs, as well as to DVD-RAM discs.

One curious omission: This is the only recorder we looked at that lacks a FireWire port for copying movies from a digital camcorder. On the other hand, it has an SD Card slot for copying still images (which a digital camera or camcorder typically saves to it) to the hard drive or DVD.

Upshot: The DMR-EH50S makes high-quality recordings and is easy to use, but some users may not like the TV Guide On Screen program guide.

Melissa Perenson

User Reviews for Panasonic DMR-EH50S DVD Recorder

  • Reviewed by: Sharad1982

    Duration of ownership:

    Strengths: versatile

    Weaknesses: Why am I not seeing good picture quality?

    Overall Evaluation: Alright, folks, please help me outI purchased this dvd recorder about 7-8 months backbut to this date i am not achieving that great video quality everyone is speaking about.I don't know what i am doing wrongis it that i'm using composite connection only ? i mean i just have the dishnetwork cable plugged ini am not using s video or component since my tv is not supporting it, could that be just reason, or what is the problem, the photo quality is very dull, no colors, darkish.can someone help me PLEASE--SharadSharad1982@comcast.net

  • Reviewed by: ndbob79

    Duration of ownership:

    Strengths: excellent image quality

    Weaknesses: no Firewire IEEE port for a digital camcorder

    Overall Evaluation: This is my 2nd Panasonic DVD Recorder. I previously owned the DMR-HS2, which served me well for 2 years until it required a repair which was apparently irreparable. The repair center offered me the DMR-EH50S as the DMR-HS2 is no longer available. The hard drive on the DMR-EH50S is substantially larger and the image quality is comparable. After owning the DMR-EH50S for 2 months, I was deeply disappointed to learn that it does not have a DV (firewire) input to transfer digital camcorder home movies. I am, therefore, in the market to buy another DVD recorder.

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