|  | Posted by Paul Heslop on 01/15/07 01:19 
irwin wrote:>
 >   I want to convert dozens of VHS tapes to DVD.  Am I better off buying
 > a high-quality DVR (e.g., Pioneer DVR-640H-S DVD Recorder) and inputing
 > the VHS signal from a stand-alone VHS player. Or, should I buy a combo
 > VHS / DVD recorder (e.g., Panasonic DMR-EH75VS Progressive Scan DVD
 > Recorder with Built-In 80GB Hard Disk) as your article seems to imply?
 > I'm wondering if the latter, which is designed specifically for
 > converting VHS to digital, would do a better job converting VHS than
 > simply pushing analogue signals into the more sophisticated DVR like
 > the Pioneer?  Clearly the Pioneer has many other advantages, e.g.,
 > recording from airwaves, bigger HD, double layer DVD outputs; but I'm
 > worried that it won't intelligently grab the VHS signals.
 >   I've read several replies to previous question and most say "don't
 > buy a combo."  Is that still the consensus of the community?
 > Thanks, Irwin
 
 It would depend on many things, but mainly on whether your VHS tapes
 are home movies etc or commercial tapes. A machine with a built in vhs
 will almost certainly block you copying a commercial tape. I also
 cannot say I am impressed with the panasonic vhs deck in their
 machines, mine was noisy and the picture wasn't good and I returned it
 to the store. Oh yeah, from what i could work out the copying was
 direct, with no editing available. My recorder was the smaller
 Panasonic, without the hard disc.
 
 --
 Paul  (Need a lift she said much obliged)
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