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Panasonic DMR-BW880 Blu-ray recorder review

For DIY recording in HD, you can't beat a Blu-ray recorder

Our Score 4

Last reviewed: 2010-08-22August 22nd 2010

panasonic-dmr-bw880

The BW880 has two Scart sockets, but we can't think why you'd want to use them

Steve Jobs may have dismissed Blu-ray, but when it comes to watching and archiving HD movies, IP delivery and hard-disk storage have some way to go before they can match the convenience and efficiency of optical media.

And for the significant, but niche, group of enthusiasts who like to archive either TV broadcasts or their own digital home video recordings, a Blu-ray/PVR combi is the ultimate living room recorder, especially when it has dual Freeview HD tuners.

A couple of years ago, Panasonic bestowed a brace of Blu-ray recorders on the world with its Freesat models, so it was no surprise when the 500GB DMR-BW880 and 320GB DMR-BW780 recently rode in to town on the coat tails of Freeview HD.

When Freesat launched it was hampered by copy restrictions that prevented ITV HD shows from being archived. Happily, this situation is not an encumbrance to Freeview, as present rules allow BBC HD broadcasts to be copied on to Blu-ray multiple times, while those from ITV and C4 may be copied once (and you can make further limitless standard-definition copies).

Considering how cutting-edge the DMR-BW880 is under the hood the box itself looks somewhat bland. The fascia is split into two dropdown panels; one hides the optical disc drive, the other, through which the LED display shines, reveals some basic transport control buttons, composite video/stereo phonos and inputs for DV, SD card and USB.

Panasonic dmr-bw880

With Top Up TV now offering Sky Sports, the absence of a CI slot could prove critical for sports fans. The front edge of the otherwise nondescript top is festooned with 14 barely visible badges such as AVCHD, GuidePlus+ and DTS-HD MA, with the Freeview+ HD, DVB and Gracenote logos getting full prominence on the front right panel.

The latter has significance for anyone likely to use the BW880 as a music server; the hard disk can store 40,000 tracks and has a folder structure similar to an MP3 player with artist, album, playlist, favourite and random options.

Despite charging a princely sum for the BW880, Panasonic doesn't provide any built-in flash memory, and to enjoy BD-Live you need to supply your own 1GB SD card.

The company did at least find room for both optical and coaxial digital audio outputs. All common video formats can be output, with the exception of component video. Up and running It takes some time to get to grips with the BW880.

If, like me, you take the plug 'n' play approach before reading the 120-page instruction manual, you'll be pleased to know that the machine tunes itself in and asks you to set basic preferences such as power saving settings.

Within minutes, I was watching BBC 1 and instinctively pressed the okay button on the remote to access the channel list. No programme info is provided here but scrolling up and down and selecting a channel is reassuringly fast.

Considering Panasonic's deck is such a complex beast, both the menu system and remote control are well laid out, and the latter deserves special praise. It's a nice size, has good ergonomics and colour coding, not to mention the fact that all the vital functions are easily and logically accessed.

One key button allows you to switch between the HDD, BD, USB and SD drives. For the most part Panasonic's user interface works very well, but, like the box itself, it looks dated and not nearly as slick as those used by the likes of LG and Samsung.

Even more offensive, though, is the GuidePlus+ sponsored Freeview EPG, which carries poster adverts that even Gene Hunt would find archaic. Advertising has its place, but the EPG page isn't one of them.

Another annoyance about the EPG is that you entirely loose the picture and sound of the current broadcast. The EPG shows seven channels in two-hour segments and you can switch between list and grid view. You can filter by genre, but not according to definition type (HD or SD), and you can directly view the channel or set a recording timer, including series link.

The EPG does tell you if a show in standard definition is also available in HD, and you can pad out recordings manually or change the title. Banner info when watching a live TV broadcast shows Now and Next descriptions, whether it's HD or not, as well as what the audio format is and what else is being recorded at that time.

All TV shows are recorded in DR (direct record) mode using the same bitrate (8Mbps for HD, 4Mbps for SD) as the original, to the hard disk. The 500GB HDD has a handy 130-hour HD capacity.

Performance

The HD Freeview tuner is first rate. The BBC Make Up Department should take note: the orange line across Gary Lineker's forehead has never seemed so obvious!

Shopping Results

Retailer Price
Simply Electricals £799.00

Your comments (2) Click to add a new comment

bigmin


August 23rd 2010

2. What on earth do you mean by writing in one place that it records in DR i.e. the incoming stream and then later complaining that recordings are not quite up to live pictures? If these recordings you refer to are from the HHD they will be in DR, what’s all this about encoding?

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pete_l


August 22nd 2010

1. I'v eread the review many times now and I can't shake the feeling that there's something missing from it ..... Oh yeas, got it!

WHERE'S THE BLU-RAY RECORDER REVIEW?

At 800 smackers, you've got to think that the only reason a person would want to buy this puppy would be to record Blu-Ray disks, yet the article barley even mentions that this is possible. It goes on at length about the PVR, the EPG, the sound quality but completely forgets to tell people the one thing they want to know: how good is it at recording Blu-Rays? Is it fast, is it slow? Are some disk brands incompatible? do they catch fire? can you auto-record? Where's the information that would allow people to make a considered buying choice about the one single attribute of this that is responsible for the overwhelming majority of its cost.

One can only assume that no-one at TechRadar central has done any Blu-Ray recording on this machine (otherwise it would surely have been mentioned, wouldn't it?) which makes you rather wonder just why they chose to write a review.

Maybe next we'll get Jeremy Clarkson rattling on at length about the latest supercar, but without ever taking it out for a spin C'mon you guys: step up to the plate.

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Shopping results for

DMR-BW880

Panasonic DMR-BW880

On sale for

£799.00

from Simply Electricals

Product Summary

For

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User friendly

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Versatile

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Quality BD-R recordings

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Remote control

Against

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Dated looking GUI

>

Adverts within EPG

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No CI slot

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