Sagem 64250 review

It may look familiar, but Sagem's PVR is much-changed

Three years on, Sagem has kept its latest batch of Freeview PVRs looking pretty much the same

TechRadar Verdict

Its poor tuner and indifferent HD picture quality are serious black marks for the 64250, despite its other strengths

Pros

  • +

    Big hard disc

  • +

    Multimedia playback and storage

Cons

  • -

    Poor tuner

  • -

    Fiddly editing

  • -

    Looks dull

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This is the third Sagem PVR we've reviewed in three years and long-term readers could be forgiven for thinking they've seen it all before.

That's because three years on, Sagem has kept its latest batch of Freeview PVRs looking pretty much the same. The 64250 again resembles a folded-up, budget-priced laptop but it has swapped the garish red LED readout for a friendlier amber effort, albeit one that still displays words such as Menu in a tacky way ('MEnu').

Running cache

Dual recording is possible and you can also watch a recording from the start while it's still being recorded. In-progress and completed recordings are viewable in the recording list menu and you can rename, merge them and also edit out chunks, although the latter is a fiddly process.

The PVR keeps a running cache of what you watch, lasting up to two hours, which can be committed to the hard drive afterwards by pressing record. Recordings and timeshifted material can be smoothly fast-forwarded and rewound at 4x 10x 60x and 300x normal speed.

Unfortunately, the tuner is one of the least sensitive we've come across; it struggles to pick channels from multiplexes other than 1 (home to the BBC channels) when our Sony IDTV at the same location had no problem at all. Even when signal strength and quality is above average, pictures exhibit a smooth sheen of blockiness and noise.

The PVR failed to recognise our portable hard disc when connected via the USB input but had no trouble reading a flash memory stick. It played JPEG images and MP3 audio files directly from the latter and music can be playlisted and photos viewed as a slideshow. Files of both types can also be transferred to the hard disc and placed in folders.

Audio quality is crisp for MP3s, especially when using the digital audio outputs. But although it would be wrong to expect HD quality results, our hi-res picture files still look rather jagged when piped through the RGB Scart.

The 64250's multimedia capabilities and big hard disc promise much, but its Achilles heel - its lacklustre tuner - is something that probably cannot be fixed by a software update.

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