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Sony DVDirect MC5 Multi-Function DVD Recorder user reviews

Average User Rating

2.5 stars 3 user reviews
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Results 1-3 of 3
  • "Copies old Tapes but you cant do anything with them..."
    on by rbtfly61

    Pros It works without a computer and is easy to setup. DVD’s worked in Computer and Newer DVD player

    Cons Makes disk that are useable in DVD players but that’s it… no editing etc . Wasted several DVDs…

    Summary It is a nice recorder to preservers your old analog movies. It setup fast and worked well on importing.

    It froze a few times it records dead air and wasted several DVDs even after trying to finalize.

    The DVD’s that I make need editing and with this recorder you cannot edit. For the same price you can get an Analog to Digital recorder and get rid of all the bad recordings you do and make DVDs the in-laws may want to watch.

    I did not use the picture import future so I cannot comment. But it work Like the videos You can copy them but not take them back off the DVD to manipulate.

    It is going back as it really is not good for more than making an unedited DVD that cannot bee altered…

  • "Great Solution for Video 8 Cassettes"
    on by DefaultCharacter

    Pros Easy to Use

    Cons Not Useful for Much Else (?)

    Summary About 4 years ago I tried to load my ancient (almost 20 year old) Video 8 cassettes onto my computer using a device (sorry -- forgot what it was) that connected my old Sony Handycam Video 8 camcorder to the s-Video port on my computer, and while the video seemed okay, the sound was completely messed up. I tried for about 5 hours to correct this using various adjustments, but couldn't get anything to work and gave up.

    At that time, I did more research on the internet and it was recommended that I purchase a digital camcorder and connect my old video camcorder to it and record straight to digital. I put off buying a digital camcorder (I'm just not into that anymore), until last month (12/07) when I found out that the digital cameras no longer have any input plugs for this type of thing. Well that figures - but I still didn't want to spend any $$$ for a camcorder anyway.

    My alternative was to purchase Sony's DVDirect DVD recorder or to send off my tapes to a lab to have them copied to disk. The lab fees weren't that outrageous, but would still be more than the DVDirect.

    I bought the Sony and have been pleasantly surprised. The set up steps are really straight-forward, and while you can't really do editing, you can easily copy the old Video 8 cassette contents to DVD by connecting your old camcorder to the DVDirect. And, no kidding, the quality of the DVD created is as good as the original tapes I have. Of course, some of the originals are crappy quality, but I can live with that.

    I fouled up a couple of DVDs in trying to pause the DVDirect when it was recording to skip over some of the cassette contents that I didn't want (who wants to see their ex-spouse?), so I'm not convinced that the editing features work very well for video input. I suffered through the instruction manual, but maybe others wouldn't find it so cryptic. I think having digital media as input to the DVDirect is probably a lot easier than copying from tape. When using regular DVD+r to record onto, 60 minutes is the max, so I had to baby-sit the whole thing which was a pain.

    I got around the previous reviewer's complaint about not being able to do anything with the resulting DVD by copying the contents to my computer (to my gigantic 500GB external HDD - you will need about 4 GB per hour of Video 8 tape) and purchasing AVS Video Tools from AVS Media (no, I'm not a salesrep for them). From there I can convert the DVD contents to whatever format I want and do the editing I want; the software will also burn DVDs in DVD-player readable format after you are finished with editing. You will definitely need some sort of viewing software for the DVDs and you can get a decent (and free) player from AVS Media.

    So overall, if you have some really old Video 8 Cassettes, this is a great solution for about $230. This could also be useful if you have regular VHS cassettes you want to convert to DVD.

    I'm hoping that I can use the DVDirect for other things besides this once all my old video 8 cassettes are converted.... Ciao.

  • "Worthless Stay Away"
    on by Zarella1

    Pros Burns good video

    Cons DVD`s burn on it can`t be copied.
    No way to check audio before burning

    Summary How can Sony copyright content they don`t own?
    No point burning DVD`s you can`t copy.

Results 1-3 of 3

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