Panasonic DMR-E95HS Progressive-Scan DVD Recorder with 160 GB Hard Drive


Compras Nikon
Bluetooth
free TV Guide¨ On Screen 8-day program guide (listings for local broadcast and cable TV) * built-in 160GB hard drive for recording/playback * digital video (IEEE 1394) input for use with compatible camcorders * records to DVD-RAM and DVD-R * plays DVD-Video, DVD-RAM, DVD-R, Video CD, DVD-Audio (stereo only), CD, audio CD-R & CD-RW, and MP3 CD-R & CD-RW *
The Panasonic DMR-E95HS progressive-scan DVD player/recorder features a built-in 160 GB hard drive and PC Card slot, making it the hardest-working home entertainment device around. Now you have the option of recording to DVD-RAM and DVD-R media, recording your favorite programs to hard disk, or recording from an external digital video camera to DVD media--all in one unit. The DMR-E95HS is also a progressive-scan DVD player, which means that you can experience extra clear images and higher resolutions on your high-definition or HD-ready television.

The DMR-E95HS can play back DVD-Video, DVD-Audio (2-channel), DVD-RAM, DVD-R (recorded on Panasonic units), Video CD, CD, CD-R, CD-RW, MP3, and JPEG/TIFF discs, and can record to DVD-RAM and DVD-R media. It features selectable recording modes including XP, SP, LP, EP, and FR, and you can get 284 hours maximum recording time in EP mode. There is also the option for bilingual recording (to DVD-RAM only). The player has a playlist playback function, and also features aspect ratio control, dialog enhancer, frame advance and reverse frame step, slow motion playback, and a cinema mode for more cinema-like colors and improved resolution and contrast. Other features include two-channel Dolby Digital audio recording, and Advanced Surround (simulated surround sound from two speakers).

Recording to hard disk is easy with a multitude of special features, including a Time Slip Roller, simultaneous record and play, and a direct navigator. The Time Slip Roller (or Time Slip Button on the remote control) allows you to press just one button during recording to start playing back the scene recorded 30 seconds earlier, and you can search for scenes in units of one minute within the recorded section while you're watching the scene on a small onscreen window. Simultaneous record and play lets you record an episode of one program while you're watching another episode at the same. The direct navigator displays the list of programs recorded to disk so you can quickly see what's available, erase recorded programs, or select programs to watch.

A bevy of inputs and outputs lets you connect the DMR-E95HS to nearly any external home entertainment device you can think of. It sports three composite video, three S-video, and one RF input, along with one switchable component video, two S-video, and two composite video outputs. Audio outputs include two L/R outputs plus an optical digital out for DTS and Dolby Digital output. It also features a FireWire input for connecting to a compatible digital video camera (via an IEEE 1394 cable) for playback on your television, and also gives you the convenience of transferring your home movies to DVD media. A special PC Card slot is included for viewing of digital photos, and is compatible with most formats including PC Card, Memory Card, CompactFlash Card, MultiMediaCard, Smart Media Card, and Memory Stick.

What's in the Box
DVD video recorder with built-in hard disk drive, universal remote control, DVD-RAM disc, RCA cables, user's manual, and warranty information.


1 Customer Support is a Disaster
I purchased my DMR-E95HS online and received a defective unit (apparently a very common hard drive problem). My first mistake was not returning the unit and, as requested by Panasonic, delivering it to one of their authorized service retailers. It's been several weeks and the service center is still showing the parts as on backorder. Panasonic's customer support center has not been helpful in the slightest. If you have an issue make sure you call customer support early in their workday, because I had two instances where they had stopped answering their phones before their listed closing hours. Now I'm stuck waiting for a unit that will take who-knows-how-long to get the parts, and, given the experiences of others I am unlikely to get a unit that works properly.

I highly recommend avoiding this unit and the Panasonic brand.
2 I Will Never Buy Panasonic Again
As I am writing this, my DMR-E95H is in continual reboot mode after I tried to burn a DVD and it apparently does not like the media. Panasonic's customer support is non-existent. They ignore emails and the toll free support number is always busy. After reading several different forums I find that I am not the only one extremely disappointed with Panasonic. Several others have unpacked their brand new unit only to find it DOA. Those who have tried to take their unit to a service center have horror stories of waiting weeks for a fix only to get it home and find that it still has problems.

When the unit is working it is slow, the menus are badly organized, the functions are awful. Sometimes one must press 'return' to leave a function, other times 'stop' is required. The program menu is a complete disaster and makes the user develop blisters to press enough keys to page through selections. This unit is simply the most horrendous piece of consumer electronics I have ever purchased.

Actually, considering all the problems and lack of support, I am considering reporting Panasonic to the Texas Attorney General and Better Business Bereau. Maybe TechTV. Heck, anyone! This is the most ripped-off I have felt in years. I paid enough for a top of the line product and am stuck with a total lemon.
3 Lots of Potential - Little delivered
I have an older version, DMR-E80H, 80gig, with the old navigator (pre-TV guide), which I love.
I bought the DMR-E95H, 160 gig, tvguide navigator, mainly because I wanted more disk space. I was going to sell my older one. Unfortunately, this is so unreliable that I have kept my old one to use, and I'm stuck with this very expensive lemon. I wouldn't feel right trying to sell this to someone else.

There is a lot of good ideas and potential here, but most of it doesn't work reliably, and what does is poorly done. Many nice features in the original navigator are gone.

What do I miss about the original navigator? I works like a VCR with some cool features. You program in a show (date, time, speed, repeat, etc), you can also add a title so you always know what you recorded. You can also set it for `renew' which means it records over the old space each day, good for things like the news, it won't fill up the disk and you don't have delete things to make space. You can go in and edit any of this, say a show is on a different time one week, just go change the time, and then change it back. And if one show overlapped another, you could select the one with priority, but the other would record the rest of the alotted time.

On the new navigator, you can manually set it to record instead of using the tv guide functionality, but you can't edit after the fact. If you make a mistake, you have to start over, if the time changes, you have to delete it, set a new record program with all the info, and then do it again to put it back to the normal time after. If you just want to change the record speed, you have to redo everything. If you want it start late, because the ABC shows are all running late these days, you can't edit it, you have to start over.There is no longer a renew feature. And if the first show overlapps with the second, you only get the first and nothing of the second.

Why do I use the timer record instead of tvguide, because it's a good idea but a useless unreliable piece of junk. The booklet tells you that you can't start a show the same time another show is ending, ie if a show ends at 9Pm and another starts at 9PM, the second won't record. On occasion it does, usually it doesn't, no rhyme or reason. So I set everything to end one minute early, requiring the timer setting.

Now, if you forget to turn the recorder off at night, or you're up late watching it, it doesn't pull down the programing and when you record something you get no title. But you can't just set the title you want when you set up the recording like on the old navigator. But the tvguide system doesn't even have all the main channels... it's missing some of the HBOs, SHOtimes, Starz, etc.

The tvguide interface is crap. I have hundreds of channels, and if I were to use that to see what was on it would take all day. You can't page through the channels, you can't hold the down button and just cruise through the channels. No! You have to repeatedly hit the down or up button to go through the guide. Talk about carpal tunnel syndrome. And to make matters worse, each time you go to a new channel it changes the station being viewed and freezes up while doing so, making the whole process take longer and making it impossible to view one show while looking to see what else is on. Sometimes if you hit the buttons real fast you can go over 4-5 channels before it happens, but it still happens. They should talk to Comcast about how to do an online shedule viewer. Even their worst versions where better than this. There is no search function. You can go to the alphabetical sort screen, but if you want something at the end of the Ms, you have to go through it one item at a time, over and over and over.

All that would be bearable if the system was reliable, it is not. My old system has only crashed a couple of times in 2 years, and went into "self check" as soon as it came on. This new system (less than a year old) crashes at least once a week, and I have to force it into "self check" to repair itself, usually twice, and then turn it off and on again, in order to get it to work right for awhile. It freezes for no apparent reason, not recording but on. You can't change the channel, cause it thinks it's recording, but it's not, and it's on the wrong channel anyways. They only way out is to go through the process of holding the on (on the recorder) down for at least 20 seconds so it shuts off. Then turn it on so it starts system check fixing what ever is wrong, again. I went away for a week, and came back to find it had frozen on the second show it was to record and had done nothing after that.

I bought this for more disk space, and I've discovered it acts the most unrealiable if I use more than 100gig, which is a little more than half the disk. It also acts up more if I record and watch and delete a lot of shows, the reason you'd have it to begin with. It also tends to crash/freeze more often if I leave a disk in the dvd tray. For a couple of months I could reliably make it crash by putting a ram disk in the system, and then it did it only every other time, but it looks like it's moving into every time again.

I wrote to Panasonic, who said to take it to an authorized repair dealer, but there are none around here. I bought it through Amazon, but through one of their third parties who doesn't take returns. So it looks like I'm stuck with this crap.

I regret having recommended Panasonics to so many people I know, but that was the old style of course. To say I'm dissapointed in the system is to say the least. To say I'm disgusted that panasonic won't replace it or refund, is really disgusting.
4 Don't waste your money!
I had the unit for one month. All of a sudden, it would not play or record any disks. I had to take it to the only repair shop Panasonic authorized "in my area" 35 miles away. They had it for 3 1/2 months. I spent numerous hours calling Panasonic also, most of which was spent on "HOLD" (your current wait time is 90 minutes....). They will tell you it can only play Panasonic brand disks. Now that I have had it just over a year (and just past warranty) it will not play most of my home-recorded disks, even the panasonic brand ones, and it will not record from a disk to the hard drive. The programming function is tedious and time consuming. Instructions on how to set up with extensive other media are non-existent. In this day and age, everyone has VCR, DVD, TV, cable/satellite box, etc. and no one wants to tell you how to hook them all together! On the phone I was told "you just can't do that". I am very disappointed in the product, their phone "help" line, and their repair service. I will never buy another Panasonic product.
5 TV Guide On Screen does not work, otherwise a decent machine
Based on other reviews here, we decided to hook up the machine directly to cable and skip the cable box, sacrificing our digital channel lineup for now since we hardly watch any of those channels.

On our first attempt to download listings by hooking up the machine and leaving it off overnight, we received 7 sets of listings from our zip code, when in fact there are 9 sets if one consults www.tvguide.com. Naturally, our lineup is one of the missing two. Panasonic's tech support says they would put in a "template request" for our lineup with TV Guide and get back to us within 2 business days. Still waiting, 4 days later. Called today and got a very rude support person who said "keep waiting."

Even worse, when I performed the laborious process of setting up all the channels myself, the next time we left the machine off to download new information, it WIPED OUT all the work I had done and put it back to the "select one of these 7 lineups or no match page." The first tech support person I talked to said, "Yes, we've heard reports that this happens sometimes." There's no solution for the bug and no firmware fix. This may be a problem ONLY WHEN you cannot select a channel lineup and have to pick "No match." I don't know.

I also found online a suggestion to reset the TV Guide settings and try again "from scratch" by holding down the up and down channel keys on the front of the machine (not the remote) to wipe out the TV Guide information. DON'T DO THIS!!! Now, when I turn the machine on each morning, instead of giving me even the 7 channel lineups I saw before, it says something like, "Attempt to download listings failed. Please make sure you have the cables connected properly." This, despite the fact that nothing has changed about how the machine is hooked up. Today's tech support person said, "Maybe this is a TV Guide problem too" and would not offer any further assistance. I think there is something wrong with the machine in this regard.

One other solution offered was to "try another zip code" -- won't work for us because we live way out in the country and our cable provider is local; no other provider in a neighboring community is going to have this same lineup. And the last solution, which we will try this weekend, is to hook up the machine WITH the cable box. The tech said that sometimes the machine can find the listings on the cable box itself instead of downloading them directly from TV Guide. This sounds iffy to me because of all the people who have said the machine tries to download even with a cable box in the mix, but we'll give it a shot.

Recording works great, quality is great, and transferring taped content onto the hard drive and editing same is very easy. My overall review: If you HAVE to have a working TV Guide, buy a Tivo or a Replay. If you can use the DVR without the TV Guide as a glorified VCR, then this machine is okay.

I haven't decided whether or not to keep mine. If the IR blaster works to control the cable box, and we can at least use the cable box's version of TV Guide, I might keep it. Manually specifying what we want to record is no different than what we were doing with the VCR, and we get the advantages of the hard drive storage and the ability to transfer and edit from our videotapes.

Overall I'm disapointed though. Panasonic ought not to be selling something that doesn't really work, and without the TV Guide feature this thing really isn't worth what I paid for it.

UPDATE:
We tried hooking up the machine with the cable box. It worked, and the IR blaster of the DVR does control the cable box -- this is essential, otherwise we would not be able to program the DVR to record a certain channel on a certain date and time. However, the DVR's TV guide still does not work, so there's no such thing as "one touch recording" with this machine (at least for us). It still presents the same 7 listings every morning and still wipes out any channel customization that we had done the previous day. Panasonic's tech support has never called back. I suspect that if we COULD pick a lineup from the list, the TV Guide would work well. We succeeded in burning and finalizing a DVD that played fine in a Playstation DVD player, so that part of the functionality works as advertised.
6 The DMR-E95HS Does Not Disappoint!
If you are looking for a set top dvd recorder, look no further than the E95-HS. Feature packed, this recorder has nearly everything you could ask for, as well as being user friendly.

Although there isn't as many editing features as you'll find on a PC authoring program, this product has everything you'll need to transfer old Beta, VHS, MiniDV, etc. to DVD. This is a must to preserve memories that are deteriorating day by day.

The 160 gig HD is a must. I couldn't imagine not having a hard drive of this size. It will store over 36 hours of material on XP, which is my primary recording mode.

You can schedule tv programs using the tv guide feature, or by manually selecting the start and stop times. Contrary to popular belief, it is compatible with digital cable boxes.

This model features one touch recording and play list editing, which allows you to move chapters in different orders to customize your dvd.

I would recommend getting a signal booster for your cable though before recording television, as well as using high quality cables to get the best picture possible.
7 Beware JPEG image viewing is very dodgy
I bought this DVD Recorder and it it Great, EXCEPT that I cannot view any JPEG images. What a hassle I went through buying dirrerent memory cards and PC card adapters only to find out that it will not display standard jpeg images and only specific images straight out of certain cameras. I have an older Minolta Digital Camera and these images do not conform, hog-wash. If you want to change the images in ANY way before showing them, red-eye, color balance, contrast, etc., it will not display them either.
I have found the same issue is true for their Plasma TV's as well; no jpegs except from specific cameras. Also the DVD-RAM disc was not included in the box.
8 Complicated but WAY COOL!
I researched these recorders on line for a few weeks before settling on this unit. I'm not unhappy with my decision. I will say that this is NOT a device for a novice. I've had some problems with programing, and downloading the TV GUIDE listings to the point I needed to call Cust. Service. After 75 mins on hold, I was helped, and my problems have been solved, but the manuals are not the easiest, so the 75 min hold time was worth the wait. Worth the wait are the total operations of this unit, it's smooth, fast, versatile and if you buy it correctly, one of the best buys on the market. I gave it 5 stars, EVEN with my start up problems because this IS a great machine!
9 Couldn't ask for more!
I got this beast of a DVD Recorder for Christmas and I am completely satisfied. I previously owned a Toshiba DVD Recorder without a Hard Drive but it took very little time to figure out how to use the advance features the DMRE95H has. All you need to do is look in the manual for what you are trying to do and follow the instructions. After doing this 1 or 2 times you will know exactly how to use it.

The 160 GB Hard Drive is awesome. You can simply hit the Record button and it will record the show you are watching or you can use the TV Guide feature.

Don't hesitate to buy this recorder!

Thursday, 04-Dec-2008 20:46:18 CST
Quote of the Day:


I am what you will be; I was what you are.

There is, in fact, no reason to believe that any given natural phenomenon,
however marvelous it may seem today, will remain forever inexplicable.
Soon or late the laws governing the production of life itself will be
discovered in the laboratory, and man may set up business as a creator
on his own account. The thing, indeed, is not only conceivable; it is
even highly probable.
-- H.L. Mencken, 1930