Entered CNET Catalog: 07/13/2004
SKU: DMRE95HS
Manufacturer: Panasonic
Manufacturer description
Your hectic schedule isn't always compatible with TV program schedules, so being able to quickly locate your favorite shows and record them for later viewing is important. The TV Guide On Screen Electronic Program Guide lets you easily find your favorite programs and set up your DVD recorder to record them unattended. Explore program listings up to 8 days in advance, searching by genre or keyword to help narrow down your choices. Once you've found what you want in the listings, simply select the program and your DVD recorder will automatically begin recording at the preset time. You sit down to watch this week's episode of your favorite show and realize that you never got around to watching your recording of last week's episode. Not a problem with Time Slip, featuring simultaneous record and play. Select this week's episode in the program guide, start recording, and as it records you can watch your recording of last week's episode. What if you set up your DVD recorder to record a movie from 8: 00 to 10: 00 while you're out, but dinner was faster than you expected and you get home early? With the Chasing Playback feature, you don't have to wait for the program to finish recording in order to watch it. You can begin watching the portion of the program that has already been saved while the DVD recorder continues recording the remainder of the program. If you own a VCR, it's almost certain that at some point someone has accidentally recorded over a movie or show that you wanted to keep. One-Touch Record will save your favorite programs from the same fate by automatically scanning the disc for blank space before starting the recording process. No more worries that your favorite sitcom's season finale will be overwritten by a family member's Sunday fishing show. You and your family are sure to enjoy the convenience of your DVD recorder so much that you'll have a large library of recordings in no time. Keeping track of all those programs would be difficult if it weren't for the enhanced Direct Navigator, which displays thumbnails of every program on the disc as you browse, making it easy to identify the contents of each recording. The massive capacity of the built-in hard disk means you'll have plenty of space to record shows for everyone in the house. Record lots of programming, figure out what you want to keep, then move it to DVD-R/RAM in minutes for long-term storage. The goal of any playback device should be accurate reproduction of the original content. In the case of DVDs, most of that content is film-based. Utilizing advanced progressive scan playback techniques and very accurate MPEG video decoders, this DVD recorder provides an image that faithfully represents the image you see at your favorite movie theater.Product summary
The good: Hard-disk/DVD combo recorder with huge storage capacity; cable-box control; free TV Guide programming guide; Flexible Recording mode; FireWire, SD, and PCMCIA inputs.
The bad: Programming guide isn't compatible with satellite or digital cable; nonintuitive user interface; soft recording quality in EP mode.
The bottom line: The impressive feature set of Panasonic's high-end combo recorder doesn't overcome some basic shortfalls.
Editors' review
- Editors' Choice: No
- Reviewed on: 11/18/2004
Editor's note: We have changed the rating in this review to reflect recent changes in our rating scale. Click here to find out more.
The Panasonic DMR-E95HS has a two-tone silver face that's brimming with buttons, bumps, and slots. It's not exactly ugly, but its looks would certainly play runner-up to those of the head-turning Philips DVDR615. At 3.13 inches high by 17 inches wide by 10.75 inches deep, it's beefier than those ultraslim DVD players that are so in vogue right now but not appreciably bigger than a standard video player in the average home-theater rack.The busy front face of the E95HS includes some features that distinguish it from its sibling recorders in Panasonic's lineup. To the left of the centered disc tray you'll find two separate slots for SD and PCMCIA cards and a fold-down door for the front-panel A/V inputs. To the right, five indicator LEDs reveal media and function info, and basic controls provide direct access to recording, playback, and channel selection.
The onscreen graphical user interface improves on the obtuse design that Panasonic had in previous years, but it could still use some work. Click the Function button for access to the main menu of features, including the Direct Navigator, a menu of thumbnails that correspond to different recordings on a disc; Timer Recording, for setting up timers or entering VCR Plus numbers; Flexible Recording (see Features); and the Player and Disc Setup menus. The E95HS lacks the TiVo-powered models' idiot-proof contextual menus or even the helpful, wizardlike Easy Guider screens found on Lite-On's bargain-priced LVW-5005. If you value ease of use, go for one of those models; if you're a technically astute power user looking for advanced functionality, you'll be able to muddle through the Panasonic's menus.
The DMR-E95HS's medium-size remote control is standard Panasonic issue. It's densely crowded with buttons, including a numeric keypad and advanced functions, but centrally placed navigation keys and video-transport controls make it usable enough. It can control most brands of TVs as well.
Like last year's impressive DMR-E100HS, the DMR-E95HS is a combo recorder able to record video to its internal 160GB hard drive and DVD-R/RAM discs. You typically record your shows (or camcorder videos) to the hard disk, then dub anything that's a keeper to DVD. Much like with any DVR, the hard disk and the DVD-RAM let you record one program while playing back another; watch an in-progress recording from the beginning; and pause, rewind, and fast-forward live television. The multitasking functionality extends to the dubbing feature. For example, while you're burning a disc of Tuesday night's TV favorites, you can start watching Wednesday's without a hitch.The DMR-E95HS includes the TV Guide On Screen electronic programming guide (EPG) and an IR blaster, so it can control an external cable box. Unlike those on TiVo-based recorders, the TV Guide EPG is free. But since it needs to be downloaded over an analog TV connection (the data is encoded on some of your local broadcast channels), it won't work with digital cable or satellite systems--a major drawback.
Following in the footsteps of previous Panasonic recorders, the DMR-E95HS includes two of our favorite features: flexible recording length and predub editing. The former lets you fill up a DVD to the exact length of your program (say, a 2-hour, 45-minute movie) to maximize the video quality. And the ability to edit on the hard drive (albeit rather tediously) is useful for chopping out commercial breaks or reordering camcorder videos before permanently archiving them to DVD. Neither of these features is available on competing TiVo DVD recorders.
The E95HS also has two flash-card readers (SD and PCMCIA) for viewing digital photos. You can pop SD cards directly into the dedicated slot or buy a PCMCIA adapter that works with any other format (Memory Stick, SmartMedia, xD-Picture Card, CompactFlash), so just about any camera is compatible. Curiously, though, unlike the DMR-E100HS and the newer DMR-E500HS, the E95HS can't read or write compressed MPEG-4 video files for portable camcorders and video players.
The DMR-E95HS has pretty much every connection you'll need. All the A/V inputs (one up front and two around back) and outputs (a pair at the rear) offer a choice of composite or S-Video. Just like a VCR, the E95HS has an RF input and output for cable or antenna. Rounding out the back side are two outputs: a progressive-scan component-video connection and an optical digital jack (no coaxial). A FireWire input completes the front panel. The only missing link is a component-video input (found on most Philips recorders).
As mentioned earlier, the biggest frustration you'll encounter with the Panasonic DMR-E95HS is that its most compelling feature, the free TV Guide On Screen EPG, won't work with satellite or digital cable systems. If you have an antenna or an analog cable system, though, the TV Guide system provides an adequate graphical user interface for choosing and recording your favorite programs.Another shortfall of the Panasonic approach is that recording isn't always on. Unlike TiVo and Philips combo recorders, which always buffer live TV for easy pausing or rewinding, the DMR-E95HS requires you to actively select what you want to record, meaning you could easily miss a key line of dialogue or a fleeting sports score on the news. On the upside, the remote does have a handy 30-second skip button for blasting through commercials.
As with the DMR-E95HS's sibling Panasonic recorders, we got excellent video quality when we used the XP and SP modes, which can fit one and two hours, respectively, on a DVD. Colors were well saturated, the image was very stable--a big improvement over S-VHS--and SP resolution measured an impressive 450 lines. That dipped to 230 lines in the four-hour LP mode. The six-hour, or EP, mode looked significantly softer than LP, introduced stutter in pans, and managed barely 200 lines of resolution. Panasonic also lets users toggle to an eight-hour EP mode, but it's all but unwatchable. The hard disk uses the same four recording-quality modes, but 160GB give you the luxury of setting everything to XP (36 hours) or SP (70 hours). During dubbing, you can reduce the quality to squeeze more material onto a DVD.
After dubbing to a standard DVD-R, we had no trouble playing it back in a number of other players. The E95HS, meanwhile, did a good job playing most of the discs in our test suite. Our home-burned DVDs (from other recorders) and MP3 CDs played, for the most part, without a hitch. And while the E95HS doesn't support JPEG picture discs (CD-Rs), JPEG photo viewing from a variety of cameras' flash-memory cards (using the SD slot and a separately purchased PCMCIA adapter) worked well. Picture quality was satisfactory; the E95HS demonstrated 2:3 pull-down detection and exhibited decent progressive-scan playback.
User opinions
Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20out of 20 user reviews
HORRIBLE CUSTOMER SERVICE
Pros: feature packed, but not all the features work with all cable
Cons: TV Guide does not download, Terrible customer service
out of 20 user reviews
Satellite recording problem solved!
Pros: The hard drive rocks; editing; dubbing to DVD-R is a breeze
Cons: Limited satellite recording capability; no component video input
out of 20 user reviews
Works well but beware: NOT Hi Def
Pros: big hard-drive, reasonable editing capabilities
Cons: Best output resolution is 480P, not good enough for Hi-def
out of 20 user reviews
Complementary to a Tivo
Pros: Video Editing
Cons: Lousy Guide Listings
Tivo shines in the Interface and guide listings. I think a Tivo without a DVD recorder is a nice complementary product to this device. I record shows on the Tivo and play the Tivo throuhg the Panny. I can then record stuff off of the Tivo to the Panny. It takes an analog quaility loss but it's not that bad if you use a good S_Video cable. The Tivo is great for TV show recording and the Panny is good for everything else: Editing, camcorder, play lists, burning, etc.
BTW: Tivo has a lousy mpeg encorder and will do a terrible job when archiving your old home movies. The panny will handle any video source no matter how old a decrepit.
out of 20 user reviews
Panasonic needs to improve quality
Pros: This unit says it can do more than other similar units like Toshiba, Tivo and Replay. DVD-Burning, SD card reading and jpeg viewing, and Free EPS.
Cons: EPS, needs one full week to down load all data (when it works)
out of 20 user reviews
Excellent product.
Pros: works great no problems yet :)
Cons: It be sweet if this DVD Recorder lets you record everything.
But it does'nt. It will backup anything that is pornographic
NOT Movies. If you attept to record protected DVDs/VHS you will
get the following message; "Copying of this material is not allowed"
I tried other DVD Recorders different messages; "Recording this
program is not allowed." "This material is protected with macrovision
recording is denied.
out of 20 user reviews
Too complicated!
Pros: I could not get this thing to work at all. The instructions in the manual are very convoluted and include diagrams of all sorts of setup situations, such as how to connect if have a cable box or a vcr, but not one for a simple tv only set up. If you're li
Cons: Too complicated set up.
out of 20 user reviews
EPG Works fine with Digital cable
Pros: -one click recording with Free TV Guide. -Nice video output. -Lots of menu options
Cons: -Maybe it could use a dummy mode for non technically inclined persons. -Receives poor reviews from people that don't check the facts.
out of 20 user reviews
Does work with digital cable!!!
Pros: Great implementation. Easy to use. TV Guide good, and it works with digital cable.
Cons: Haven't seen any
out of 20 user reviews
Do not support DVD-RW, sad...
Pros: Nice quality. Good ergonomics. The major drawback - not supporting DVD-RW.
Cons: It does not support DVD-RW, very bad spec. TV guide is not practical. You can not watch a different channel while recording. I just wonder why manufacturers, cable providers do not integrate TV box into a VCR. License issue? Damn, it is not good for consu
out of 20 user reviews
So far I love it!!
Pros: Great picture- Cool features No cost for "TV Guide"
Cons: Takes a while to learn how to operate all features
out of 20 user reviews
Does work with Digital Cable!
Pros: No problem getting TV Guide programming via Patriot Media digital cable service, central NJ. Recording quality to DVD very good. OEM tech support very attentive to user calls.
Cons: Features are definitely not intuitive, and not for the casual user. If you are a gadget-concious techno-geek, you will enjoy this machine.
out of 20 user reviews
Comment on editor's review
Pros: Ref the TV Guide, I have a DMR-E65 that also uses the TV Guide feature. It's connected to a Digital Cable Box. It took the E65 a couple of days to "find" the source for loading and updating the TV Guide and both Panasonic and the TV Guide folks worked wit
Cons:
out of 20 user reviews
Good features but horrible implementation
Pros: Large capacity disk with ability to offload to DVD.
Cons: Timer programming not reliable -- there is a bug in the firmware that Panasonic will not fix that causes about 15% of the timed program not to record. User interface needs work -- my poor wife is totally baffled about its operation even though she was qu
out of 20 user reviews
Awesome, but steep learning curve.
Pros: Big HD, DVD-RAM capability. Amazing recording quality. SVIDEO ins and outs. Chase play. (watch and record a show on the HD at the same time) FREE TV guide schedule is great.
Cons: Expensive. Wish it burned DVD-RW. Wish it had even a BIGGER HD (400G)! Needs an ethernet that pulls schedule from the net, and allows you to program away from home.
out of 20 user reviews
Works with Cox Digital Cable
Pros: Found setup easy - Lots of features, pause live tv!
Cons: tv guide could be more intuative. This is not a vcr so expect to learn a new way of doing things.
out of 20 user reviews
Work's fine with DIGITAL cable!!
Pros: Easy to use. You can edit before burning to DVD. TV Guide is free and goes out to seven days. No phone line required.
Cons: Pricey. A little bit difficult to setup. Problem with first unit, but had it replaced for free and works great.
out of 20 user reviews
Panasonic's Top-of-the-Line DVR
Pros: Time-slip recording.
Cons: TV Guide Plus only works with analog broadcast/cable. Not able to use satelite/digital sources.
out of 20 user reviews
Works as supposed to!
Pros: EPG, Input capability (esp. Card Readers), Fast Forward. EPG does work with Comcast Digital Cable, in spite of everything on web saying it doesn't!
Cons: Difficult to learn to use all features.
out of 20 user reviews
Great dvd recording speed
Pros: 2x 10x 30x 70x 100x fast forward of hdd
Cons: Steep learning curve to operate machine. Manual is very difficult to navigate
