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#1
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Quote:
As the cost of computer memory keeps dropping, this trend will accelerate... 1 TB (1000GB) hard drives are down to slightly over $100 now, and memory chips are dropping quickly as well. For example, I have one 64GB SDXC card with several full length movies and many shorter programs stored on it. In time, hard drive storage may well be replaced by solid state memory, as prices of memory chips/cards continue to decrease. just my 2 cents, jr |
#2
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I've had this Emerson combo player for eight years. It gets about two hours of play every day and so far no problems.
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Let me live in the house beside the road and be a friend to man. |
#3
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I have a similar Toshiba that I use in the shop when not watching the vintage sets, and it has a great pic. Had the earlier model that bit the dust just before the warranty was up, and they replaced it no charge. Going to keep it until it craps out.
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stromberg6 |
#4
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VCR+ has a website where one can have codes generated for specific dates and times (I had to use it a couple of years back to get around not having the original remote for a deck.
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
#5
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I wish I had known about this site while I still had my Panasonic VCR with VCR Plus+, and it was still working. Some time after the machine jammed on me, IIRC, the local newspaper had stopped printing VCR Plus+ codes. The Cleveland newspaper still prints them every day in their weekly TV listings magazine and also in the paper itself, in the entertainment section. Until I saw Electronic M's post, I had no idea VCR Plus+ was still in use these days, as most manufacturers of standalone VCRs (when such machines were still available and were built halfway decently, not like the offshore junk we are seeing now) stopped installing VCR Plus+ in their machines some years ago. The only remnant of my Panasonic VCR Plus+ VCR I still have is the remote, which I saved because it will work with my current Pana machine.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. |
Audiokarma |
#6
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Orion-made DVD/VCR combos seem to be okay, usually under the Toshiba brand.
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#7
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I have an LG VCR/DVD combo but all I ever use is the VHS side as I have it hooked to an older Magnavox DVD recorder that for a long time saw daily use. I don't like the menu on the LG and find it hard to manage to be honest. It plays VHS tapes fairly decent, at least good enough to dub off to a DVD. I'm recording off-air programs from TV from 20+ years ago that haven't made it to DVD yet and it does okay for that. I would agree with others that you're probably better off to find a well-serviced stand-alone VCR from the time when they were built better and run it to a stand-alone DVD recorder or your computer.
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#8
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I think Panasonic make the best ones. I would not consider (or be happy) with anything else.
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