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I am so confused!

Trying to buy a VCR ... its impossible!

         

Liane

4:11 pm on Feb 18, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



OK, I have just spent 3 hours I will never get back trying to buy a VCR online and I still don't know what to buy!

I am looking for a high end VCR with excellent picture and sound quality. I do not want a DVD/VCR combo. Just an old fashioned, really good quality VCR! Does such a thing even exist anymore?

I have two, really crappy Panasonic PV - V4524S VCR'S which are about 13 months old. One bit the dust last week and the other one is already starting to display the same characteristics that the first one did before it died.

I have had many VCR's in the past. Back when VCR's first came out, I bought the best one Toshoba had. It was a 4 head model and back then it cost about $700.00 Canadian. It died within a year. I figured that was an anomoly and bouth yet another very expensive Toshiba VCR. It too bit the dust within about 2 years.

So I switched to a cheaper RCA model (about $300.00) and it was great. It lasted nearly 5 years! Since then, I have had less expensive Sony's and one or two others which were no name brands. None of them worked nearly as well as the RCA. Unfortunately, RCA have all but gotten out of the VCR business as have many manufacturers in favour of DVD's and DVD combo sets.

I want to buy two more, very good quality VCR's. I was reading consumer reviews of the Panasonic PV - V4640 and thought I had a winner ... until I went to Panasonic's web site and they don't list it anywhere and I can't find anyone who appears to be selling this model.

Do any of you have any suggestions? I am tired of wasting my money buying crap!

sem4u

3:16 pm on Feb 19, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I would go for a JVC VCR. The one I owned had a great quality picture, much better than any other VCRs that I have seen. Sadly I decided to give this one to my parents when their old one died. I then bought a Toshiba and it isn't nearly as good!

moishe

8:01 pm on Feb 20, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Mitsubishi and JVC both make VCR's that are capable of doing HD TV and are of very high quality, the JVC has more connections on it but I think the Mitsubishi is a bit cheaper. Both should be available sub $600 US.

bill

9:07 am on Feb 21, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



They still make VCRs? ;)

I bought a new TV and related accouterments recently in Japan and it's really tough to even find units with VCRs in them. It's all HHD/DVD combos now. It looks like a lot of the Japanese manufacturers aren't even developing new VCR technology anymore. It's all digital now.

Liane

11:58 am on Feb 21, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It's all HHD/DVD combos now.

Sigh ... I know! I am getting desperate. I hate those blasted combo units and hate the DVD thingme's. I just want a really good VCR. I gues if I ever find anything, I am going to have to buy a lifetime supply of the things!

Its like what happened when I tried to buy a new answering machine! They don't make ones with tapes anymore and the digital ones are useless in the islands because we have regular and frequent power outages. The stupid little batteries don't last more than a couple of days here and it gets ridiculously expensive to keep replacing them. So if the power goes out overnight and is off for about 3 or 4 hours ... I lose all my messages because the batteries pack it in! *&^%$£

Technology is great sometimes but not every change in technology is an "advancement"! Sometimes, the older technology is much better for specific applications.

Does anyone have any specific VCR model recommendations?

lawman

12:43 pm on Feb 21, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



This won't help your VCR question, but there are digital answering machines with nonvolatile memory.

Liane

1:11 pm on Feb 21, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Thanks Lawman! I just now ordered a Panasoninc KXTG5452M Dual Handset system with digital nonvolatile memory answering machine built in!

Many thanks for the tip ... I should have it within a week! :)

moishe

7:02 pm on Feb 21, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Liane, Google Mitsubishi HD VCR and or JVC HD VCR, you will find a couple good ones.

As a side note, my experience on St. John was that if you don't have AC running all the time, the life expectancy of any VCR is fairly low, you might be better served to just keep buying VERY cheap VCR's and replacing them. I would think you could find new ones online for $30 with postage being no more than 20-30....

bcolflesh

7:08 pm on Feb 21, 2006 (gmt 0)

saoi_jp

2:24 pm on Feb 23, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



When you do find the VCR, also consider an analog-to-digital converter. You can plug a VCR output into it, and it'll send digitized data to your computer. You can back up and burn to DVD.

This is what I'll be doing next month. I have some time available. I figure, it's either that, or buy a few VCRs and keep them in storage for the future :-)

jomaxx

7:17 am on Feb 24, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Highest-end VCR these days is probably a HDTV cable box with built in hard-disk recorder. I have the HDTV box (via Shaw Cable here in Canada) but didn't spring for the extra few hundred bucks for the digital recorder, so I don't really know how it works.

Presumably it works with regular broadcast signals in addition to High Definition signals. Don't know if it works with a regular TV. Don't know about reliability. Don't know if you can back up data on the hard disk to any other medium. But if you're looking for a videophile quality recorder, this is probably the direction you want to be heading.

wmuser

5:18 pm on Feb 24, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



JVC S-VHS top models should be fine,i have seen at least a few in offline stores

Liane

5:23 pm on Feb 24, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



JVC S-VHS top models should be fine,i have seen at least a few in offline stores

Actually, I (eventually) found just that online at B&H who I deal with for my Nikon camera equipment! I ordered two but am thinking I will buy 2 or 3 more (for future use) if they turn out to be reliable and of good quality.

Thanks for the tips guys! :)

shigamoto

11:12 pm on Feb 25, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I have an old Grundig german VCR. It was top of the line when I bought it four years ago, still delivers nice quality, might be needing some cleaning.

However I'm toying with the idea of building one of those nifty computers than can tape programs on to a hard-drive. But then I don't think they are showing that much programs worth taping so it's on hold.

jdancing

12:09 am on Feb 26, 2006 (gmt 0)

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I am so glad I don't have to watch those grainy VCR videos anymore. It's TIVO and a recordable DVD player for me.

I imagine you can find, high quality almost free used VCRs at the online auctions. Heck, I have 2 or 3 laying around in my basement doing nothing that are about to go into the trash to free up space. Swing by my house on garbage day :-)

digitalghost

12:11 am on Feb 26, 2006 (gmt 0)

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>>high end VCR with excellent picture and sound quality

ROFL DFE

Liane

6:42 pm on Feb 26, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Well, isn't it nice that you live in the "real world" ... but in a third world country, we don'y have TIVO, our power is off almost as often as it is on and we can't tape and watch TV at the same time. Our one and only cable supplier doesn't allow boxes which will do that and we don't get satellite tv here.

So for me, its a VCR or nothing!

digitalghost

7:38 pm on Feb 26, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>Technology is great sometimes but not every change in technology is an "advancement

Change from VCR to DVD certainly was and why do you hate the 'DVD thingme'?

Liane

9:30 am on Mar 4, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Change from VCR to DVD certainly was and why do you hate the 'DVD thingme'?

I like to tape programmes so that I can watch them in the middle of the night when I can't sleep.

I have a VCR/DVD combo thingme. I have a vision problem (even with my glasses) and I can't see the 13 thousand different little buttons they have on the remote control.

My old VCR was great! It had large buttons which lit up in the dark and some basic, record, play, fast forward, reverse and stop buttons. That's all I want. Just something simple and easy to see. I don't rent movies, so why would I want a DVD?

percentages

9:55 am on Mar 4, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



>I just now ordered a Panasoninc KXTG5452M Dual Handset system

I have the Panasonic KXTG5439 system, it is great, you should like your similar choice (the lit keys are great for those that like dim lighting or have sight issues).

I'm in Florida, we have similar power loss issues in the summer!

As for VCR's. My wife made be buy a new one just before Christmas so that she could watch her old movies (Our 10 year old GE VCR finanlly died).

We went for the Sony RDR-VX500 DVD/VCR Combo. I know you hate combo's, but this unit lets you record on DVD as well as transfer your VCR's to DVD.

It plays the old tapes until you transfer/record them on DVD, lets you record to tape or DVD (rewrite if you decide not to keep), but most often we use it to back up the Tivo content we want to keep once the Tivo is getting too full.

It costs less than you paid for your first VCR, with a power surge suppressor in place it should be good for years to come.