|  | Posted by William A. T. Clark on 04/17/06 14:03 
In article <Xns97A6D5814182Athanexit@216.196.97.135>,thanatoid <waiting@the.exit.invalid> wrote:
 
 > "Deke" <no spam@today.com> wrote in
 > news:1f3fe$43e833cb$943f8239$27144@STARBAND.NET:
 >
 > > "William A. T. Clark" <clark.31@nospamosu.edu> wrote in
 > > message
 > > news:clark.31-C47994.14313906022006@charm.magnus.acs.ohio-st
 > > ate.edu...
 > >> I happened to be unlucky enough to be given a JVC DR-MV1S
 > >> DVD/VCR recorder as a Christmas present a little over a
 > >> year ago.
 >
 > Well put.
 >
 > > So give JVC some slack.  Go look at one of the JVC D-ILA
 > > HD televisions, compare it with anything else on the
 > > market, and you'll see that JVC still makes some incredible
 > > products. Just my two cents.
 > >
 > > Peace
 > > Deke
 >
 > Sorry to join in so late, but this is my first time here. (I am
 > posting a tiny yet very annoying problem ASAIGATI. I thought I'd
 > read a few posts first. While I'm at it, I apologize if I am
 > about to mention things everyone already knows. See first
 > sentence.)
 >
 > Here goes...
 >
 > I hate to oversimplify things, but does anyone know what JVC
 > stands for?
 >
 > Japanese Victor Company (as in RCA Victor).
 >
 > The last time RCA made anything decent was when they were making
 > 300 lb. television cameras in the 50's. (I don't know WHERE
 > these new Chinese portable CD players etc. etc. with the RCA
 > logo on them come from.)
 >
 > If you ever used older (80's and 90's) VCR's, camcorders, or
 > semi-pro monitors, you would know they were often identical from
 > both brands. They may still be, I don't know.
 >
 > JVC has a tradition of being the first with some very feature-
 > rich product, which is given rave reviews UNTIL someone actually
 > uses it. I remember...
 >
 > (this was in the 70's when 20-minute " mini "U-Matic" video
 > cassettes appeared, a Sony invention, I believe - just like VHS,
 > BTW. VHS was invented by Sony and discarded as >>>not good
 > enough<<<. Then they developed Betamax, SO MUCH BETTER - but
 > more expensive - so it died, of course - well, it came back to
 > life in possibly the last great Sony invention - the Betacam pro
 > video recorder - even Sony is no longer what it used to be, by
 > far. Anyway, JVC *bought* the VHS technology from Sony, and
 > admittedly, improved it very considerably (it DID take them like
 > a decade, though), but it's still crap. Of course, almost dead
 > now, but still crap.)
 >
 > ...when JVC came out with the first portable " "U-Matic" video
 > cassette recorder ("portapak") that offered what Sonys (yet) did
 > not, an almost glitch-free "pause-then resume recording" feature
 > (and some other impressive *specs*). I think this was in 1976 or
 > so.
 >
 > After using it for a few months and having it in the repair shop
 >  of the time, as well as after comparing the image and sound
 > quality, we all decided never to touch the thing again.
 >
 > Since then, I have always been suspicious of JVC, although
 > almost anyone will make a great product once in a while. Ages
 > ago I had a little >>LLOYD'S<< stereo clock radio which worked
 > like a charm. And some repair technicians I know are fond of
 > saying "Nakamichi (and B&O, etc. etc.) products are fantastic.
 > As long as you don't try to actually USE them."
 >
 > I have been pretty lucky with most of my purchases, but I never
 > buy anything when it first comes out. (WHY do they pick "car of
 > the year" before anyone actually drives one for more than 3
 > blocks?)
 >
 > I had a Sony Walkman WM-F10 (the FM radio version of the "Super
 > Walkman") from 1982, I think, and I used it EVERY DAY for
 > several hours (almost never the radio, even though it was VERY
 > good). It ran like a dream for over EIGHT years!!! It was the
 > first with the in-ear bud phones!!! I have copied music *from
 > it* onto a component cassette deck and they sounded pretty
 > great, considering the size of the thing (for the young'uns, it
 > was a  inch taller than a cassette box, other dimensions being
 > virtually identical)!!! It had an (undocumented) head azimuth
 > adjustment screw so EVERY cassette sounded fantastic!!! (I
 > always had a tiny screwdriver with me along with some spare
 > NiCad AA's...)
 >
 > Those were the days... Sigh...
 >
 > Anyway... anytime I ever had anything "repaired", it ended up in
 > the trash sooner or later. "Service" is a myth. And "extended
 > service" is a total ripoff. A salesman once told me he ONLY made
 > commissions from the "extended warranty" sales he made. I wonder
 > why???
 >
 > If you're lucky, it will work almost forever. If it has to be
 > repaired, you might as well save yourself the hassle, bite the
 > bullet, and buy another one.
 >
 > Just my experience.
 >
 > (BTW, VERY interesting "surge-protector" change in the thread.
 > Informative, and the giraffe comment was hilarious.)
 
 Well, the latest is that, after over three weeks, JVC sent me a
 refurbished DR-MV1S to replace mine. So far I have hooked it up, and so
 far it all works fine. Keeping my fingers crossed though . . .
 
 William Clark
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