CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 07/27/2006
- Updated on: 11/07/2009
Operationally, the DVD recorder works similarly to a VCR. You schedule record times--date, start, stop, and channel--much the same as a VCR. We found the onscreen programming logical and easy to set up and use. That said, anyone who's familiar with a cable, satellite, or TiVo-style DVR will miss gotta-have features such as an onscreen electronic programming guide and dual-tuner recording--the ability to record one channel while watching another.
Mounted on their stands the front-left and -right towers are 53.25 inches tall, or if you don't have the room, they can be wall-mounted sans stands, which shaves 14 inches off their height. The center speaker is 12.5 inches wide; the surround speakers--which are also wall-mountable--are 10.6 inches high. The SC-RT50's molded-plastic subwoofer feels a little cheesy; it's 9.25 inches wide, 17.5 tall, and 15.5 deep, and it weighs 14.8 pounds; we expected something with a bit more meat from a $600 system.The digital amplifiers of the Panasonic SC-RT50 deliver 105 watts per channel to the front-left and -right speakers, 220 watts to the center speaker, 90 watts to the two surround speakers, and 190 watts to the subwoofer. Those power ratings seem completely outrageous to us but are certainly in line with other brands' far-fetched HTIB power specs. The A/V receiver's surround processing covers the usual Dolby Digital, Dolby Pro Logic II, and DTS options.
The system can play back a wide variety of discs, including DVD video, DVD-Audio, audio CDs, and MP3 and JPEG discs. On the recording front, the RT50 can burn to all types of discs: DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, and DVD-RAM. The SC-RT50 also features flexible recording length. This option allows you to specify exactly how long your recording is, so you can completely fill the DVD, maximizing video quality.
On the connectivity front, the SC-RT50 is pretty underequipped, especially considering the fact that it's a DVD recorder. The highlight is an HDMI output, which offers the ability to scale your DVDs to 720p and 1080i resolution. In addition to the usual assortment of DVD video outputs--composite, S-Video, and component--the system offers two sets of A/V inputs with S-video: one on the rear and one on the front panel. There's also an additional analog stereo (red and white RCA) input, but no digital audio inputs or outputs. In addition to the RF input and output (for direct connections from analog cable or antennas), the only other notable features are the 1/8-inch Music Port on the front panel, for easy connection from the headphone jack or 1/8-inch line output of portable music players; a FireWire port, for dubbing from DV camcorders; and an SD slot. One thing we did like: in addition to displaying your DVDs to HD-friendly 720p/1080i resolution, the scaling also works for whatever video source you have plugged in.
The center and tower speakers are bona-fide two-way designs employing two 2.5-inch woofers and a 2.3-inch tweeter; the surround speakers get by with just a single 2.5-inch woofer but no tweeter. The subwoofer has a down-firing 6.75-inch woofer.
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