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Originally Posted by stormeh In *my* experience the advert marking has been good enough for me to locate and then flick a few frames either side to remove them. Its a welcome feature for me even if its not 100% frame accurate, again not something I bloody need.
Sorry for the tone but I just get really annoyed that you seem to think this machine should be a pro editor or something for like ~£200. The advert marking is usually within about 12-25 frames for me, close enough to locate and erase.
Sorry it doesnt work for you and yes your letters to Sony are worthwhile and we appreciate it but your constant slagging off of anything that anyone seems to suggest is good about the 870 is just getting tedious. John I apologise for this outburst, not a good day and I should not take it out on you. Maybe my outburst was a bit too vehement
Mike |
I really don't have much against the 870. Overall I think it is reasonable value for money. However, I bought it as a recorder, amd use it mainly for 'time-shifting'. Nevertheless the DVD recording/dubbing aspects are very important to me, and what really angered me was that Sony's earlier DVD recorders manage real-time dubbing with no problem.
I agree that on the whole you get what you pay for ... after all, I use a Naim DVD5 as the main CD/DVD player for my AV system, and that player costs more than 10 times what the 870 retails at - and it doesn't even upscale. Even then the DVD5s picture quality using the TVs upscaling is IMO several orders of magnitude better than that of the 870, 860 or 710.
I do believe that the 870 has a nicer remote control than the very spongy ones supplied with the 710 or 860.
Let's just agree to differ on what we find acceptable, and I will continue with my attempts to get Sony to fix the dubbing aspect ratio problem, even though I no longer own the 870.
On a different tack, I am beginning to wonder about the Sony DVD recorders' decoding software. I have noticed both with the 710 and 860 (and to a lesser extent with the 870 IIRC). This is that when I record off-air material (doesn't matter which aspect ratio)and play it back on the Sony from either the HDD or a DVD-R copy, some strange artefacts occasionally appear on the recording, e.g. sometimes parts of faces seem to remain immobile, while the rest of the picture moves, or perhaps vertical lines in the background may gently move from side to side (I mean compressing in and out, rather than just lateral shift). If I record an offending item onto DVD-R, finalise it, and play it back on the Naim, no such effect is seen, so it must be something in the Sonys' playback decoding which is producing it. I don't know whether this applies to pre-recorded DVDs on the 710 and 860 in my study as I never use the Sonys for that kind of playback, but I have noticed it on pre-recorded commercial DVDs when using the 710 in the living room. It's not a very obvious thing, but like many other minor problems, once you're aware of it, it can become very annoying. I suspect that this is one part of 'getting what you pay for', and is really a minor thing in the context of the price of the 870
Now, I really must get around to writing that letter to Sony UK's Managing Director, although I believe I'll probably get yet another 'brush off'