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Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion by Panasonic

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141 of 146 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Debunk bad reviews - I'm a satisfied customer
I almost didn't but this unit because of bad reviews and that it is more expensive that most recorders. Fortunately, I was able to get the unit for $179 at a local retailer who was willing to match Amazon's price. The bad reviews caused me to buy several units, bring them home and test them. I bought the Toshiba D-R560 and the Philips HDD Recorder. I didn't try the Sony...
Published 21 months ago by FairMinded

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41 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ok, but has its problems
First, I want to say that you cannot edit a chapter once you have recorded it. You cannot take out parts (commercials or whatever) at all! It says in the manual that you can but when you follow the instructions they do not match the menu on the screen. Beware of people saying you can do this because they obviously have never tried! Panasonic really didn't work hard at...
Published on May 31, 2008 by E. Koehler

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141 of 146 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Debunk bad reviews - I'm a satisfied customer, October 11, 2008
By FairMinded (Chicago< IL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
I almost didn't but this unit because of bad reviews and that it is more expensive that most recorders. Fortunately, I was able to get the unit for $179 at a local retailer who was willing to match Amazon's price. The bad reviews caused me to buy several units, bring them home and test them. I bought the Toshiba D-R560 and the Philips HDD Recorder. I didn't try the Sony because I couldn't find one with the Divx feature. I didn't try any with VHS features because those where more expensive and I don't own any VHS tapes. The Toshiba's recording function was nice. It was quick to respond and easy to use. Unfortunately, I could never get the Toshiba unit to find channels with the digital tuner over my basic Comcast service. It found zero digital channels. This was disappointing because I looked forward to using the Toshiba's QAM tuner to find clear cable channels.

The one thing that I wanted that was missing on the Toshiba was a USB port. The Philips HDD recorder has a USB port. So, I thought I'd consider it along with it's hard disk recording benefits. Unfortunately, the Philips USB port does not read Divx. It only read Jpeg and WMA files. Also, I found the Philips picture interior to both the Toshiba AND the Panasonic. The Philips picture was dark, on all channels, and graining on many SD analog channels. So, I took the Philips back right away. After all of this, it was clear that only the Panasonic had most of the features that I needed. It has a USB port that can read Divx, in addition to reading Divx in the DVD drive. This way, I have a choice to burn a Divx DVD disk or simply save a video (avi / divx) file to my flash drive and save DVD costs on videos that I just want to look at once. The Panny is also the only unit with a SD slot. I have not used it but will in the future. The Panny also gave me S-Video inputs on the front and back, as well as an optical audio output (in addition to a coaxial output) on the back to connect to my Yamaha amps that uses only optical audio connections. The only thing that this unit lacks in a QAM Tuner for cable channels. Regardless, I found that the ATSC Tuner in the Panny was able to display all of the over-the-air HD Channels, as expected. The only thing it might not get is the "cable" HD channels that are "in the clear". Lastly, though the Toshiba picture was good, I think the Panny picture was the best of all three. To top it off, in contrast to the Toshiba (which found zero digital channels on Comcast Basic Service), the Panansonic found many, many digital channels!!!

I want to address some of the negative comments that I have found on this site about this unit: Yes - Channel surfing on this unit is a little slow. But, my research has lead me to believe that many digital tuners and HD over-the-air stations tune slowly because of the amount of information involved. I don't think it's that bad once you get used to it. Regarding the comment that you "can't split titles and chapters". This is not true. People - This is one of the most flexible recording machines on the market. But, you've got to read the manual to learn about it. If you don't like reading manuals, just do simply records - I'm sure you'll be fine.

In summary, I'm one happy customer. This is a qaulity unit that leads the industry in features to price. It's a great value and a quality product!
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66 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent DVD Recorder, November 3, 2008
By Dan R. Wojciechowski (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
I got the Panasonic DMR-EZ28K for two main purposes: to watch standard DVDs, and to record Digital Over-the-air broadcasts. As would be expected, the EZ28 does a fine job of playing DVDs, so I won't say any more about that.

As a recorder for OTA broadcasts, 3 things seem to matter: How good is the ATSC tuner? How reliable/easy are recordings? What is the quality of the recordings?

As far as the tuner goes, I couldn't be more pleased. The EZ28 easily has the best tuner of any device I own. I have a 5 year old Panasonic Plasma TV, a 4 year old Sony HD DVR, a 2 year old Viewsonic LCD TV, and a 1 year old Panasonic EZ17 DVD recorder. Only the EZ28 can reliably lock the one fairly low power, distant station that I get off the *back* side of my antenna. The EZ28 also reliably locks a very low power "oldies" station from the correct direction that none of the other devices will lock. Clearly, the EZ28 has a superior tuner, even compared to last year's EZ17. (I use the EZ17 DVD recorder as a digital-to-analog converter for an old TV and the EZ28 would be even better, although if I only needed SD output, I'd probably look at the cheaper EZ18.)

On to recording ease and reliablity. The EZ28 is programmed VCR style. The menus are completely adequate, though a few things could have been improved to reduce the number of button presses. All in all, nothing to complain about. So far, recordings have been 100% reliable; I haven't missed anything I've programmed. I have used single use 16X DVD-R disks (completely reliable and convenient), single use 16X DVD+R disks (require 30 seconds of formating before use), and multi-use DVD-RAM disks. I found multi-use DVD+R/W disks to be unreliable in the older EZ17, so I haven't tried them in the EZ28. The RAM disks are more expensive, but do allow "DVR like" functionality: chasing playback, watch one while recording another, etc. I did encounter a one lockup, which was easily cured with a front panel reset button. For the record, I've has a few lockups with the EZ17 as well, but so far the EZ28 is better.

I've viewed disks I've recorded on both the Panasonic Plasma, the Viewsonic LCD, and an old fashioned analog TV. One and two hour recordings are superb, and even 4 hour recordings easily beat VHS tape recordings. I prefer the "up scaled" out put to the SD output, not because I see any real improvement in detail on my plasma TV, but because the color and contrast seem better, though this may simply a difference in the way my TV processes a 1080i input versus a 480p input.

I've also used the EZ28 to record some of my old HI8 home videos to DVD, using the front panel S-Video input, and the results are as good as the original tapes (though that doesn't say too much). I've copied a few things from my HD DVR to DVD via the back side SD S-Video input, and the results are once again, quite good.

One of my favorite features is the Flexible Recording length. This is particularly nice when my HI8 tapes are 2 hours and 2 minutes long, or when I'm recording a 2.5 or 3 hour segment from my DVR. If I used the 2 hour record setting, I'd miss some of the material. If I went to 4 hours, I'd waste quite a bit of disk space and the quality would be reduced. With the Flexible Recording, the disk is filled with exactly the amount I specify, giving the best available record quality.

Summary: I highly recommend this DVD recorder, particularly if you want to make recordings of Digital OTA TV.
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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Problems solved, very reliable., November 16, 2008
By Stan Jan (Connecticut, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
The DMR-EZ28K is my second DVD recorder from Panasonic. My other DVD recorder is a DMR-E55 that my wife and I have used on a daily basis for over four years without experiencing any problems. We bought this second recorder to use with the television set in our bedroom. When I read some of the reviews on the DMR-EZ28K I was concerned about the freezing problem. I read reviews about other recorders and they all seemed to suffer from some type of problem, so I decided to go with the Panasonic since I was familiar with how to use it and I had no problems with our other Panasonic recorder. Well, the first week after I purchased the DMR-EZ28K I began to experience the freezing problem when using RAM discs. I had no problems with any other types of discs. The problem was so bad that I considered returning the machine. But before returning it I decided to try reformatting the RAM discs using the new DVD recorder. After I reformatted the RAM discs using the new recorder I have not had any problems with it freezing for the last five months, so I expect that I found the solution for the freezing, at least for the recorder that I purchased. The machine is faster and the menu is easier to work with than my older model DMR-E55 recorder. We use both machines on a daily basis to record and play lots of DVDs. We always check any discs that we rent for grease or dirt, and we are very careful when handling discs to make sure they are not covered with any grease or dirt. I believe that may be one reason why we have had such great performance and reliability from these two recorders. I highly recommend this recorder and I am looking forward to several more years of problem free usage from this machine.
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41 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ok, but has its problems, May 31, 2008
By E. Koehler "Isabelle" (Salt Lake City, UT USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
First, I want to say that you cannot edit a chapter once you have recorded it. You cannot take out parts (commercials or whatever) at all! It says in the manual that you can but when you follow the instructions they do not match the menu on the screen. Beware of people saying you can do this because they obviously have never tried! Panasonic really didn't work hard at testing this product or they would've noticed this.

This recorder has many great features, including good picture quality, the ability to pause a recording (many older DVRs could not do this), and it is easy to use. The menu is fantastic; I have worked with older DVRs that had confusing and difficult menus. However, it also has its flaws. First of all, sometimes after you record a program and press "record" again to record something else it won't record. You have to completely re-start the machine in order to start recording a program. You have two options for powering the machine on as well. There is a "quick start" option and a regular one. The regular re-starting takes 2 full minutes before you can record. The "quick start" doesn't work properly. After trying the quick start I realized I couldn't use it. It would sometimes turn on, sometimes it wouldn't. It would sometimes turn on only to say the disc wasn't properly formatted, when it obviously was (as I've been successfully using the same discs since I bought the machine). Other times it wouldn't pick up the cable signal at all, saying "no signal found." This became very frustrating. I would have to unplug and re-plug the machine in and sometimes this wouldn't even work. Eventually I realized the "quick start" function was the main problem, which means you have to use the 2 minute regular start up, which is annoying when the machine won't record and you have to constantly re-start it.
It is also troublesome that the machine says it is 1080p, but is not Hi-Def and will not pick up Hi-Def signals. I believe that Panasonic purposefully marketed the player as "1080p" to trick people into thinking it works with Hi-Def. The picture quality of the DVDs is great due to this feature, however. The digital tuner is also useful because it is the only way you can record off of TV if you have a regular cable plug in and not a cable box (as in my case).
While this DVR has many good features, it also has some bugs that Panasonic should have worked harder to eliminate.

I bought the recorder to record new programs off of TV, but to also copy tapes I have onto DVD. It works, but it's a slow process, especially because it the DVR's inability to record over and over again without re-starting.
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Really a Bad Choice., March 24, 2009
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
Before buying this product(Panansonic recorder)after Christmas, I read all the reviews. Most people seemed to be satified with their purchase. A few people were very dissatisfied, saying the unit would lockup (freeze). Now I see many reviews from people experiencing the same problem I am having. The recorder worked fine for about a month. Then one day it locked up, and wouldn't respond to any buttons I pushed. I un-plugged the unit and pushed the power button. The display flashed "HELLO" several times, locked up, and displayed "HELLO", but wasn't flashing. I couldn't eject the disc. I called Panansonic and was put on hold for forty minutes. When I finally got to talk to a person, they said I would have to send the recorder to a service center in Illinois.
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Multple problems, October 20, 2008
By Lumpy (Fort Wayne, Indiana United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
I bought this unit new in May 2008. Had it 3 months and started to have many problems. Unit froze up several times, Scheduled recordings didn't start several times.
Took it back in to Best Buy and they sent it to Panasonic for repair. They had it over one month. When I got it back it still had the same problems with no explanation. I took it back in to Best Buy the next day and off it went to Panasonic again. Another wasted month. Not impressed with this Panasonic DVD recorder. Best Buy won't exchange it after 30 days.
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23 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars My experience with panasonic dvd recorder, January 11, 2009
By Triplec (Milwaukee, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
Bought last years model for $200 on Amazon. Loved
it and worked fine for last 15months and now has died.
The drive is shot, says "no read". Only 12mo warranty. Looked online
and found minimum cost to fix is $130. Even tried
cleaning the lens and transport. Very upset
that this machine is now junk. Best Buy associate
commented that these typically last no more than 2
yrs and then die. So, if you want to still buy it, I
would recommend some extended warranty. I will not buy
another one....now looking into tivo. Buyer beware.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Mostly Works But Not Without Frustrations, March 30, 2009
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
I bought the Panasonic DMR-EX28K DVD recorder as a replacement for our VCR. I did not go the DVR route because I wanted to own a device and not have to pay ongoing subscription rates. I've been using the device for about 6 months now, and I haven't had to spend anything beyond the initial cost of the unit and a package of DVD-RW+ for recording.

I chose this particular unit because there were not many options available that included a tuner. The tuner is important because you cannot setup scheduled recordings or watch one program while recording another without a tuner. This has not changed from the VCR days. What has changed is that the cable and satellite companies have put a lot of pressure on the electronics companies to minimize competition with their DVR units.

The performance of this unit reflects the lack of competition as I would love to have a better performing alternative. Setup of the unit is not complicated, but it is slow. After you connect everything and turn it on, the process of scanning for available channels is very slow - about 15 to 20 minutes. Once set up, it is pretty easy to schedule recordings of your TV shows. You can choose either one time or a repeating weekly program. It allows you to balance picture quality with the number of hours you can record on a disk. The higher the quality, the less you can fit on a single disk. When it does the right thing, the device does a good job.

However, it can behave in flaky ways. I originally set it up to automatically set the time. This turned out to be a bad idea as the clock mysteriously jumped 20 minutes ahead, and I didn't discover this until after one of my scheduled recordings was butchered. The "Function" menu also doesn't always behave properly. This is the menu that you have to use to delete old programs before you can reuse a disk. Sometimes when I select the "Delete" option on the menu, selecting the OK button *plays* the selection rather than *deleting* it. Exiting out of the menu and coming back in clears it up, but what's up with that? The other problem I have is with the execution of deletes. Sometimes the device will hang while deleting a selection, and powering off the device is the only way to get it unstuck. After powering back up, I find that the deletion was successful. However it is annoying. Finally, the device occasionally locks up to the point that it can't even be powered off. The only way out of this is to unplug the device and plug it back in.

Overall, I would rather have a different DVD recorder. However, at the time I found that there just weren't many viable alternatives in this product space. I work around the frustrations because I can ultimately get the device to do what I want it to. I just wish it didn't take so much effort. I would recommend that you check for alternatives before buying this unit.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars "No read" problem, February 8, 2009
By Captain_Pass "M.Cush" (San Leandro, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
Like Triplec, I have had this identical problem--and a Google search shows others have as well: In my case, the recorder has never been moved or jarred, and yet one day--conveniently for Panasonic, a mere month after it went out of warranty-- it simply stopped reading discs: "No Read." I tried everything, but to no avail. I now have a $200 tuner that will neither read nor record. BAD EXPERIENCE.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Does not allowing editing of most DVDs, August 20, 2008
By cpromain "cpromain" (Charleston, SC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Panasonic DMR-EZ28K DVD Recorder with 1080p Upconversion (Electronics)
The only real editing the unit allows for DVD+RW or DVD-RW is to select a thumbnail image. You cannot split a title or add new chapter divisions. This makes it very inferior to most competitors. The editing capability is all for the DVD-RAM which is a Panasonic product but is not comptabile with most DVD players. So if you purchase a DVD that you can edit you can't play it on much of anything else. We returned our unit after one day of trials.
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