Others say...

"Good DTV (HD?) tuner, works with Comcast, sets up easty, remote is so-so."
After reading all the reviews, and the forum, and actually using it for a week, I'm still not sure if this is truly a HD tuner or not (I must feel about HD the way some people feel about computers, how can this be this complicated to figure out?). I replaced a Humax HFA100 with it, and I can say the picture does not look as good as I recall the Humax picture looking (the Humax died so I can't do an A/B comparison). It does look good, but not great like I recall the Humax with a good over the air (OTA) signal.

I can say a few things about it (comparing my experiences to some of the reviews I'm guessing Toshiba made some improvements as I cannot explain what others have seen):

* It gets Comcast DTV via QAM just fine (as someone else pointed out, do the extended scan, which is non-intuitive I admit).

* It seems to pick up OTA signals better than my Humax did (I was having to constantly adjust my antenna with the Humax).

* Set up is easy. It walks you through it. I don't understand any of the complaints I saw with this regard.

* The remote is average (as remote for most products are). Fortunately the software for my Harmony knows all about it, so I only used the remote for about 10 minutes until I got my Harmony programmed.

I haven't tried any of the DVD or DVDR functionality yet. I'm also don't have any HDMI yet, so can't speak for that.

Overall I'm happy with it just to get the QAM tuning and the free digital channels on my basic cable. I use it for my 8'x4' screen (front projector) - analog signals just look like garbage at that size, the DTV channels from the Toshiba are clean enough to look good. The price was also right.


"Not happy with Toshiba"
I bought this unit on Nov 28 and I want to return it! It never worked properly. First day it got frozen and only unpluging it for 3 minutes solved the problem. Then, after doing the extended scan 2 times it grabbed the DTV channels, but after some hours the clock changed date and time and all the Channels were gone. I decided to call toshiba and they sent my a pre-paid label to ship it for repair, I just got the unit back 3 days ago and they said tuner was replaced, software check and ready to go. Yesterday again I lost all the DTV channels from the memory, I called toshiba again and the representative said that the only thing they can do for me is trying to fix it again NO EXCHANGE, that was ridiculous, the unit was all the time anywhere but my home. Thanks God I can return the unit and get my money back to the store where I bought it from, paying the shipping. The only thing that I was not able to confirm is the 5.1 audio in my receiver, Comcast doesn't broadcast it and I didn't have a chance to connect an antenna. I bought it mostly for the DTV tuner but TVs are getting cheaper and I guess I can wait and save time and health not dealing with Toshiba again. Maybe the do only good laptops

"Garbage"
Just after 2 months it broke. Starting making a clicking sound
within the player, and now it doesn't play any discs.
And too late for an exchange!
Look elsewhere.........

"Good product, great price"
I bought this (and a 19" LCD) to replace my old analog TV and VCR that I use in my camper. Set up was easy since I'm only using an OTA antenna, and I was ready to go in about five minutes. Don't let the dire warnings about the manual intimidate you; the menus are intuitive and easy to follow. I only consult the manual for information on more complicated things.
There is one caveat; the tuner doesn't seam to be as strong as the one in the TV. Even using the same antenna, the signal strength is weaker on the DR-560. What's even weirder is that even though my local PBS station (9.1) has a stronger signal than the local FOX station (20.1), I get nothing but a blue screen there while the FOX station comes in great (???). Of course if you're on cable, this won't be a factor.
And, yes, the remote is hard to read, but you get used to it.
One more thing, I ordered a $2 HDMI cable with this that came from a vendor other than Amazon. Even though I ordered "expedited 1-3 day shipping" it still hasn't shipped yet and it's been four days now (ahem...). It's still cheaper than the rip off prices you pay at the Big Box stores, but come on already, slap a label on that thing and get it out the door!!
Overall I'm satisfied with this product. We'll see how long it lasts.

***UPDATE***
The $2 HDMI cable I ordered arrived today (Jan. 2). I ordered it on a Sunday night, and taking into account New Years Day, it only took four business days to get here. So now I'm happy again!

"Toshiba DR560 - confused over set up & recording.....(update fixed now)"
I have to admit I'm less than adequate when it comes to setting up TV's. I believe I've got the DVD recorder correctly connected to my Comcast Explorer 8000 box. Using 2 coaxial cables, and one set of RCA jacks. I using one HDMI cable in place of Video and Audio Out. The RCA cables and Coaxial are probably not the highest quality - not sure if that will make a difference when recording. HDMI brand new. Disc - DVD-R. I went through the menu's, turned Progressive Scan on, did Auto Preset (Cable Extended I believe) - scan stopped at 125 Analog and DTV 135 - we have more channels than that. Our cable package includes Basic, Digital and HD. When I have been able to record and play back the picture quality is poor to say the least (recording HD channel). I've tried lower channels, digital and now unable to get them to Play back. Losing faith in my ability to get this running smoothly. I have read a number of reviews online including Amazon, which lead me to ordering this last week. I am not expecting HD quality (that's understood)but what I am getting is worse than any TV I've seen in a long time. I am sure the box is fine, it's me who's not got it up to par. If anyone can offer some advice, I'd sure appreciate. Worse case, we've got the cable co. coming next week for other work.. Also, I am not able to get HDMI to 1080p, only 1080i. I did get some video component cables, those did not seem to help at all..took them out. Play back, when doing nothing more than a simple 'record' and then playback should be just a push of the button I would think. I've changed my source from TV w/ cable remote and then over to HDMI where I was able to see recording....now I'm not even able to perform that. Back to it tomorrow. Not to rule out a problem with DVD recorder as the box I received from Amazon was not packed the best with the DVD player packed within a box with very little packing material. I must say, the manual is a great read, very good illustrations.
Update - called Toshiba who set me straight. Tech support reasonably helpful and I'm sure shaking his head with disbelief. Leaving this review in case anyone else needs info. I had too many cables, not needing the RCA jacks at all, down to just HDMI, Video component cable and the 2 coaxial. Will iron out any additional issues as they come up. Picture is pretty darn good with recording HD channels. I've copied a show off our Comcast box...looks decent as well. Pleased so far and looking forward to when you can actually record in HD. Still curious as to why when I do auto preset the channels only go up to 135 (DTV).

 

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  Toshiba DR560 1080p Upconverting DVD Recorder with Built-in Tuner

List Price : $229.99
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Why I buy this one ?
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What our customer's say!

"Smooth operator, with excellent future upgradability!", My Story - :-)

I bought the D-R560 before the Olympics to replace my Goldstar VCR, which had served me well for over 16 years of frequent usage. The VCR's clutch went out, then the belt, and when the encoder went bad, I figured it would be too expensive to fix it. Besides, digital broadcasting was about to replace the traditional analog broadcasting, and my Sharp TV, also another workhorse entering its 11th year, was still as good as when I bought it. When I bought the Toshiba D-R560 from Amazon.com, I was looking for another workhorse to serve me for at least the next decade, while being compatible with the new standards. I certainly found what I was looking for.

The Connections -

My input/output requirements were a minimum of 1 S-video input, to connect with my computer's video card, and a set of composite outputs to connect to my TV, as back then, composite video (RCA video) input/outputs were the most common. My requirements were quite simple then, but I did not realize how many more high-quality features the D-R560 actually contained until I bought the HDTV. Anyway, for the time, my little ingeneous master-plan of connecting the TV and the computer worked well. Muahahahaha!

Anyway, let's get back to the connection features. Just recently, I bought a SONY 720p HDTV. No, I didn't buy it to show off. I am not that type. :-P Those crystal clear images of super-models on a flat-screen HDTV must have somehow influenced me or something. Kidding, kidding! But I certainly appreciate the clarity of HDTVs. BTW, the 11-year-old SHARP TV is working well as the backup/bedroom TV, hooked up to a digital video converter. Getting back to my story, again, :-). The D-R560 offers four alternative TV connections to composite video (the yellow RCA jack). In the order of good to better quality, they are antenna-out, S-Video, component (red, green, and blue split into individual signals), and HDMI (digital audio/video interface). For component-out, it offerred the progressive scan output options. At the time of this posting, I am using its component output set-up with progressive scan on the HDTV. The picture quality is excellent. Since my SONY TV also comes with HDMI inputs, I am looking forward to trying out the HDMI option when I receive the HDMI cable I ordered from a seller at Amazon.com. Not only would using the HDMI cable provide better quality images, it would also take care of the audio, which means, I can get away with using only one cable for both audio and video instead of five (three RCAs for the component video and two RCAs for the left and right audio). Besides, the D-R560's HDMI interface also offers the amazing Dolby digital dts output. Nice!

The Recording -

In my VCR days, I had three video recording options. The short play, SP, the long play, LP, and the Extended Play, EP. If you are not familiar with VCR recording speeds, here is the skinny on it. On a standard two-hour VHS tape, SP lets you record up to two hours of recording with the best video and audio your VCR can provide. LP lets you record up to four hours, and EP - up to six hours on a similar VHS tape. When I bought my D-R560, I wanted to have the same flexibility as the VHS tape, but with the DVD R/RW disc instead. To my pleasant surprise, the D-R560 comes with a comparable feature. In fact, the D-R560 actually offers five-modes of recording, two more than my belated VCR. Better yet, the worst quality (NTSC quality) it can record is actually the best quality the VCR was able to record. The modes are as follows.

XP: Maximum recording time is about an hour on a 4-GB DVD R/RW. Supports Dolby digital audio, and provides the highest recording quality.
SP: Maximum recording time is about two-hours on a similar disc.
LP: Maximum recording time is about four-hours on a similar disc.
EP: Maximum recording time is about six-hours on a similar disc.
SLP: Maximum recording time is about eight-hours on a similar disc. This modes provides the lowest video recording quality out of the five. This is the same quality as the NTSC quality to which we have been quite satisfied all this time until recently when all of us got spoilt with high-definition.

Here is my favorite part about the D-R560. I can use a regular single-layer 4-gigabyte (4-GB) DVD rewritable disc for my everyday recordings, over and over and over again to record my favorite shows for viewing at a later time. When the disc gets full, I can either erase the disc which is as easy as a few quick menu steps, or I can erase only the shows that I no longer want. The selective deletion option is quite nice. Not to go too far into it, here is how it basically works. Whenever the D-R560 completes a recording operation, it creates a title, with a little preview in the top menu, which allows you to easily access the partilular recording and play it back without having to fast-forward or rewind through the entire disc. It does it on both timer recordings and manual recordings. The new title with its little preview appends to the existing title and its preview. Each title can be deleted separately in any order to make room on the disc without affecting the other existing titles. The D-R560 also lets the user rename the titles. As long as the rewritable disc has not been finalized, the editing is possible. If the disc has been finalized, it doesn't mean that it is the end of that precious rewritable disc. The D-R560 lets you format it and use it again. Of course, that is if the disc is still physically capable.

The Verdict -

Anyway, this has been my review of the Toshiba D-R560. I hope that this information has been helpful in doing your research in shopping for DVD recorders and such. I am very happy with my D-R560. I recommend this product to anyone, who is looking for a well engineered, easy-to-use, good-quality product, with future upgradability in mind. Toshiba has done a very good job on this particular model.

Useful Advise -

By the way, to hook it up in accordance with what seems to be the latest factory recommended configurations, accross many brands, I would recommend to also purchase an antenna splitter and an extra TV antenna coaxial cable to split the antenna/cable input into two identical coaxial lines. This way one can be connected to the TV and the other to the D-R560. After that, connect the TV to the D-R560 using one of the five available (actually four, since the TV's antenna input would not be available anymore) options that I previously mentioned, somewhere in my story.

Happy Shopping!




"Why not more units like this?", In Feb., millions of VCR's in homes with over-the-air reception will become useless. Am I wrong to think that the electronics industry is missing huge market for DVR's or DVD recorders (like this one) or even VCR's with digital tuners? I bought this unit to be able time shift and archive programs and, after a month, I am pretty happy with it. It has functioned flawlessly and offers a lot of options. Visually, the unit is non-intrusive. The instruction manual is one of the best I've seen in my 50+ years of buying electronics.

Here are some gripes, primarily regarding the remote:
- You can't de-select subsidiary channels (ie, 44-3) from the scanner list while leaving other sub-channels in place (ie, 44-1, 44-2);
- You have to go into a multi-step menu to accomplish some simple tasks, such as switching closed-captions on & off and setting the sleep timer;
- The commercial-skip button feels like it's in the wrong place, should be right of 'Play';
- the presence of an analog tuner is just going to be a nuisance;


"my rating of this fine Toshiba product.", This Toshiba dvd player has high quality with an excellent picture. I would recommend it as a buy item. Joe Ozeck-Pa.

"Toshiba DR560 DVD Recorder Review (with tuner)", Toshiba DR560 1080p Upconverting DVD Recorder with Built-in TunerGreat value for the money; reasonable price for a dvd recorder with a tuner. Good performance so far, and the menu is easy to navigate. However, any programming will be lost if there's a power outage although the time and date will resume. I recommend the rewritable CD's as it is easy to record over what was previously recorded. There are too many steps to take to accomplish basic functions of the unit; it could have been made simplier. However, overall this is an excellent product.

"Great recorder - great price", I purchased this recorder as I needed a 2nd one for my work. I already own one of these units and had no problems with it. In less than a month, I have copied over 60 VHS tapes to DVD with it and have not had one problem. The 4 hour mode still looks very good when using VHS tapes as a source. I am very pleased with both purchases.



 
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Read this reviews before You buy...

"Beware if you are expecting HDTV from this machine", Please make note that while the DR560 does have a built in ATSC Digital tuner, it can NOT output the digital stream in HD. I was wondering why all my HD programs (such as FOX football) was fairly poor in quality. After doing much experimenting over different connections, it seemed that the box outputs in no higher than 480p when watching digital TV - no matter if using HDMI or Component. A call to Toshiba confirmed that to me. He said that only when upconverting a DVD does it output in anything higher than 480p. As a matter of fact, I was only getting 480i over HDMI when watching DTV. Thats just a shame! If you want an actual High Definition Tuner, you need to look elsewhere.

"Well worth the money", Bought this dvd recorder because i did not want to have to pay a monthly fee for no dvr service, works like a charm you can program your shows to record and still watch regular TV, this is no different tha a VCR. The built in turner is really strong, i have a Toshiba Regza which picked up a ton of over the air channels but this recorder found more than my tv did. some reviews claim it takes too long to load, but you must take into account that it is a dvd , which means it has to load it or calculate how much space is left to record with

"Exactly what I was looking for, exceeded expectations", I was looking for: 1) a way to record OTA broadcast programing, 2) built in tuner, & 3) up-convert my DVDs to the 16:9 format of my TV.

1) I don't have cable or a dish so that limits my recording options. I wanted something reliable (so far so good), something that could record in 16:9 format (you can select 4:3 as well), and something fairly easy to use (it is - after the initial learning curve). I use the 3rd setting that lets 4 hours fit on a DVD - I tried a lower one and I could see a quality difference.

2) My TV (a Toshiba 32" purchased earlier this year) has a NTSC (digital) tuner as well, so I only use the DVDr tuner when taping. It's nice to be able to record one show while watching another - you need to split your antenna signal to do that if you want. The DVDr's tuner seems a little weaker (than the TV's) but still crystal clear - just not as strong (I think my TV is 96% and the DVDr is in the 80ish%). It does have a longer lag when changing channels.

3) I've only watched one DVD since I've hooked up the HDMI cable. (My limited understanding is that the HDMI is the only way to use the up-converting feature.) It looked nice, but I did not compare it to my old DVD player and on my size of TV - it won't make that much of a difference anyway.

Cons:
1) the manual is over 100 pages. And there were a few sections I did have to read (setting the quality of the recording & the type of medium being used as -R (I've only used -R), and -RW has even more features).
2) the remote - it works well, but the design with dark key on a black control doesn't do the user any favors in a darker room.

Bottom line: This is the only DVDr I have ever used, but I read a number of reviews before selecting this model, and for my needs I feel I made the right choice.

"NOT AS ADVERTIZED", THIS ITEM DOES NOT HAVE A QAM TUNER...
THE DR560 ,, IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE A QAM TUNER... THAT IS
WHAT TOSHIBA'S WEB SITE SAYS... THIS ITEM DOES NOT HAVE A QAM TUNER...
IT ACTUALLY HAS TWO MORE LETTERS,AFTER THE NUMBER DR560.

SO, DO NOT BUY ANYTHING LIKE THIS ITEM,,IF IT DOES NOT HAVE A QAM TUNER.

"DO NOT BUY THIS UNIT!!!!!!", I went through two of these in less than a month. Thank goodness for easy Amazon.com return process. Both units played one movie then "froze up" when I tried to load the second DVD. Could not eject DVDs or turn units off using front panel or remote. Had to remove power via power cord, wait for a while, then after many "ejects" got DVD out of first unit. This trick did not work on second unit. Had to remove cover and manually remove DVD. I discovered, after the fact, that all I had to do was "pull hard" on the tray to get it open.

Maybe just a bad batch (Mfg. September 2008), but will not buy from Toshiba in the future.

CGM


 
 
 

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