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Panasonic DMR-ES15S DVD Recorder with DV Input

Panasonic DMR-ES15S DVD Recorder with DV Input

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Brand: Panasonic
Category: CE

List Price: $169.00
Buy Used: $120.00
You Save: $49.00 (29%)

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New (2) from $209.95

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 134 reviews

Color: Silver
Media: Electronics
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries: 2
Batteries Included: Yes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 6
Dimensions (in): 10 x 17 x 2

MPN: DMR-ES15S
Model: DMR-ES15S
UPC: 037988253708
EAN: 0037988253708

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Slim-profile progressive scan DVD player/recorder; measures 16.9 x 2.3 x 9.8 inches
  • FireWire port for direct dubbing from camcorder
  • Records onto DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, and DVD-RAM; plays back dual-layer DVD-R/+R and CD-R/RW. Will only record in 16:9 aspect to DVD-RAM. All other media is limited to 4:3 aspect.
  • Connections: composite (2 in, 1 out), S-Video (2 in, 1 out), component (1 out), RF (1 in)
  • Optical digital audio out for Dolby Digital and DTS surround sound.

Accessories:

  • 3-Year Extended Service Plan - Covers Electronic Items $0-$200 - Repair
  • Fujifilm 25302636 DVD+r 6 Pack Movie Box

Similar Items:

  • Verbatim 16x DVD-R 4.7 GB Discs (25-spindle)
  • Panasonic DVD-RAM 4.7GB single-sided DVD-RAM discs 10-pack
  • Panasonic DVD-RAMs (LM-AF120LU5)
  • Memorex 4x DVD+RW 25-Pack Spindle
  • Memorex 16X DVD-R (100-Pack Spindle)

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Product Description
Record your home movies and your favorite TV programs easily to DVD disc with the Panasonic DMR-ES15S progressive scan recorder/player, which provides ultimate flexibility in recording media options. You can choose write-once DVD+R and DVD-R discs or rewritable DVD-RW/+RW and DVD-RAM discs (the latter being a great choice for temporary storage of recorded material as it can be rewritten more than DVD-RW). It's easy to record TV programming with the built-in analog TV tuner with RF pass-through. In addition to standard DVD movie and CD audio discs and its compatible recordable formats, the DMR-ES15S can play back CD-R/RW, dual layer DVD-R/+R, and VCD disc formats as well as JPEG, and MP3 digital formats.

Panasonic's Time Slip function consists of two features designed to give you added flexibility and control when making DVD recordings: Chasing Playback and Simultaneous Record & Play. With Chasing Playback, you don't have to wait for an entire program to be recorded before watching it from beginning to end. This feature allows you to watch a program that's currently being recorded from any point that's already been recorded--while continuing to record the live program in progress. Simultaneous Record & Play allows you to record a program onto a disc while simultaneously watching any other program that's previously been recorded on the same disc.

You can set your recorder to one of five different recording speeds, each varying in recording quality and length. EP mode yields the most recording time, LP & SP modes provide less recording time with higher quality recording, and XP mode gives you the highest quality recording. There's also the FR (Flexible Recording) mode that lets you record with the best picture quality possible for the recording time and remaining space on the disc.

The Direct Navigator feature makes it easy to find a previously recorded program on a disc. A list of recording dates, times, channels and (user-entered) titles are shown on screen. With the Playlist Playback function, you can perform simple non-linear video editing using, such as rearranging the order of scenes, skipping over unwanted scenes, or copying selections

Jump directly to any spot on a disc and begin playback or recording right away with the Rapid Random Access function when using DVD-RAM discs. Even if there is no sequential area of empty space available, this DVD recorder can record data on available space throughout the rest of the disc. You will also avoid searching for a blank spot to start recording, or accidentally recording over desired material.

Enjoy a great picture on you flat screen LCD or plasma HDTV using the component video output, and immersive surround sound via the optical digital audio output for Dolby Digital and DTS home theater effects. It also offers a FireWire port (also known as IEEE1394 or i.Link) for direct connection to a digital video camcorder, enabling you to download footage directly to disc. The full lineup of video and audio connections includes:

  • RF Input: 1
  • Composite video/audio input: 2 (1 front)
  • Composite video/audio output: 1
  • S-Video input: 2 (1 front)
  • S-Video output: 1
  • Component video output: 1
  • Digital audio output: 1 optical

Tech Talk
Component video (also called Y/Pb/Pr) features a three-jack video input, which provides separate connections for luminance (Y), blue color difference (PB) and red color difference (PR). This results in increased bandwidth for color information, resulting in a more accurate picture with clearer color reproduction and less bleeding than you would get with S-Video or composite (RCA yellow video plug) connections. You will need a separate RCA left/right audio cable for sound.

What's in the Box
DVD recorder/player, remote control (with batteries), AV cable, RF cable, power cord, one DVD-RAM disc, printed operating instructions

Product Description
The Panasonic DMR-ES15K Diga DVD Player and Recorder is a new generation of DVD recorder, for modern home theater. Taking what worked well in previous models and improving them, it also includes new features that make everyday DVD recording simpler than ever. The HDAVI-Control allows you to connect multiple components without the mess of wires and remotes that you'd normally face. The DV input and multi-drive recording and playback let you record&play back DVD-Audio&Video, CD audio, CD-DA and MP3/JPEG discs. With its easy operation and versatility, the DMR-ES15K offers you the DVD player and recorder you need to complete your home entertainment center. VCR Refresh Dubbing with advanced DNR Transfers content from a DV camcorder in just one step Auto DVD-R Finalizing DV auto recording and playlist creation Task-oriented GUI menu for easier use and completion of DVDs Simultaneous playback and recording Chasing playback tool allows you to watch the start of a program while you're still recording it Records using MEPG-2 compression, for up to 8 hours of video on one disc VBR recording foroptimized bitrate depending on type&length of recording Time base corrector for stable, natural images Front A/V input Inputs - 2 S-Video, 2 Component, 2 SCART, 2 line in 1 line out, 1 Optical, 1 Component, 1 S-Video, 1 Composite Playable formats - DVD-RAM, -R/RW, +R/RW, DVD Video, VCD CD-R/RW, MP3 CD Recording formats - DVD-RAM, DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW Dolby Digital 2-channel audio recording


Customer Reviews:   Read 129 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The best hundred fifty bucks I've ever spent...   November 30, 2006
 188 out of 198 found this review helpful

...after scouring several online audio/video discussion boards like AVS Forum, I chose this player for its acclaimed reliability, ease of use, and compatibility. Almost a year later and over 200 recorded DVDs later, I am happy to say that it has not disappointed me in the least.

I have had zero problems with playback on dozens of other people's DVD players and computers, and a grand total of 2 coasters (only with the cheapie Phillips brand DVDs, none with the Taiyo Yuden blank DVDs which were also an online-discussion-board word-of-mouth selection).

Three caveats:

1. Panasonic is known for making outstanding bang-for-the-buck mass products, but their user manuals have never been very well written as say, Sony's manuals (if only Sony's price/performance ratio were anywhere as good, unfortunately). So read and reread it as you go along, many things are not very clearly explained but quickly become clear after a little trial and error. For instance, one of the reviewers here claims that this player cannot play back widescreen material in widescreen format...absolute rubbish!

2. Consumers who are buying a DVD recorder to duplicate copyrighted DVDs will sometimes blame the DVD recorder when they cannot do this. It's not the recorder's fault, it's the electronic copyright protection on the DVDs, stupid! You're NOT supposed to be able to do that, because it's illegal, duh! There are semi-legal ways around this using certain additional hardware but you'll need to Google that up yourself, I don't want the Feds coming after me, lol.

3. Use decent quality blank DVDs...it'll cost you what, an extra ten cents or so per DVD (buy bulk quantities online at specialty sources like Meritline, for instance) but is well worth the time and trouble saved by avoiding coasters. Taiyo Yuden is well-known among the online forum community as having the best coaster-proofing, that's the one brand that has yet to ever let me down.

And lastly, if you have trouble programming your VCR to record TV programs, you will probably not have the easiest time with using ANY dvd recorder to do so. So just take a deep breath, reread the very imperfect manual many times as you go along...it'll come to you sooner or later!



5 out of 5 stars Fantastic Product!   June 2, 2006
 102 out of 104 found this review helpful

Having grown weary of dragging my home video collection (which is very important to me) all over the place, and knowing that my wife and I both enjoy making films, we decided that we'd like to get a DVD recorder. The first one that we got was a piece of junk from Samsung (I normally like Samsung, but not this time) which I got rid of immediatly, and replaced with this one from Panasonic. I was not at all disappointed.

The DMR-ES15S is a fantastic, very easy to use DVD recorder. It is extremely versatile as far as what kind of media it will accept: DVD-RAM, DVD-R/RW and DVD+R/RW as well as other types of media. Most of the menus and functions are very self-explanatory, but if you do need the instruction manual it's laid our very nicely. The S-Video and DV inputs in the front of this unit (as well as the standard AV inputs) are very convinient and make this unit very user-friendly.

In the month or so that we've had the unit I've already recorded about 30 DVDs, and have had no trouble at all. Do note that this unit will NOT record copywrited material: in fact most DVD recorders wont, so don't be too disappointed in this one. This was an excellent product for the price as well - I highly recommed this unit!



5 out of 5 stars Give it a Chance   May 27, 2007
 59 out of 59 found this review helpful

After weeks of research I purchased the Panasonic DMR-ES15S DVD Recorder last February, but came very close to throwing it into the trash shortly afterwards. This compact machine is full of fantastic features and I was extremely pleased with it for awhile. I even bought a Panasonic DVD-S52S DVD Player to use in another room with the DVD disks I hoped to make with the recorder. I was committed to moving from the old VHS tape recording technology to the more contemporary DVD equipment.

I used the proprietary DVD-RAM disks to schedule/record TV shows from my cable service for their versatility and advantages over the more common DVD-RW and DVD+RW disks for recording. This was a "no brainer" choice of recording media since the Panasonic DVD system offers so many advantages when using DVD-RAM disks and they can be used over and over thousands of times. I bought a dozen of them even though the recorder can handle a wide variety of other disk formats.

Eventually I started to notice that my recorder was having difficulty recognizing the RAM discs. I blew a number of recordings and saw frequent error messages advising me of some vague problem and that I should try a different disk. I unsuccessfully followed a number of instructions in the owner's manual in order to solve that problem. Everything else on the machine was working just as it should and I couldn't believe the brand new RAM disks I was using were faulty.

I telephoned the Panasonic support line and also contacted the support service online, but received no help at all. I was told to take my machine to an authorized service center for repair. Because the closest approved shop was miles away that didn't appeal to me very much.

I continued to doggedly search for a solution or a work around and finally discovered a fix. It occurred to me that this DVD recorder and others for that matter were inherently somewhat slow to read disks. I had the Quick Start function engaged on my recorder and got to thinking that such a speedy boot up (one second) might not give the machine enough time to do what I had programmed it to do. I turned off the Quick Start feature and the Panasonic DMR-ES15S DVD Recorder began to work perfectly. It was just a matter of using the Setup Menu to cancel the Quick Start function. It isn't all that essential anyhow. I don't know if anyone else has encountered the difficulty I had with the DMR-ES15S, nor do I know if my simple discovery will work for others, but it was certainly an easy and effective resolution in my case.

After a month of frustration, tinkering and getting the recorder back to behaving properly I am now extremely happy with it. The price was right, the quality of construction seems good and the number of features the unit has is unbelievable. I recommend this recorder as a great way to enter the world of making DVDs at home.

There is a newer model of this machine available now (the Panasonic DMR-EZ17S DVD Recorder), but it is somewhat more expensive. I doubt that it is a significant improvement over the DMR-EZ15S that I have been describing.



4 out of 5 stars DVD+RW   December 9, 2006
 26 out of 26 found this review helpful

This is a great DVD Recorder, but please be advised against using DVD+RW to record. After recording onto a Memorex DVD+RW, taking it out of the machine, then putting it back in, the recorder did not recognize the disk and asked for it to be reformatted. Attempts to reformat the disk and record on it again fail. This happened to 3 disks before I called Panasonic. After a half hour on hold, the technician told me that "we frequently experience problems recording to DVD+RW, try using DVD-RW or DVD-RAM instead".


4 out of 5 stars All's Well that Ends Well: DMR-ES15   May 30, 2007
 26 out of 26 found this review helpful

Update May 30 08, follow-on to note below: Good news and bad news. The bad news is that, in total, the disk drive in four of my five units failed. The good news is that warranties were still in effect and warranty service was superb (see below). At present, all units perform flawlessly.

WORTHY of note (added Mar 05 08): Panasonic support continues to be superb. I had disk drive failure in two units; warranty repair was prompt and thorough, no hassle. The warranty is for one year on BOTH parts and labor (better than most), and shipping is paid both ways. Couldn't ask for more! My experience has been that disk drives in general are problematic (including some other brands, NOT just Panasonic).

Note (added Dec 08 07): My S15s have continued to perform well. A few problems have been corrected with The Panasonic Firmware Update Disk.

After this few months of use my experience is that RAM disks just don't go the distance: at least 80% failure rate after 10 or 15 uses. I think the problem is the technology or the disks, not the recorder. This same is true to some extent with -RW but a much lower failure rate. I have not had any failure with -R disks. Over three years of using various recorders, I "guesstimate" my failure rate with DVD-R disks to be no more than 1% (if that). I use mostly Memorex, some TDK (a few Sony) DVD-Rs, Panasonic RAM, and Memorex -RWs.

Again, owners take note that Panasonic's Firmware Update Disk can correct some of the problems that I read about in these reviews.

Throughout, Panasonic's support has been superb.

Note (added Jun 12 07): I confirmed with Panasonic that this -ES15 is discontinued and I find that it is no longer widely available. My experience with these units tells me that it's a good thing to have Panasonic's Firmware Update Disk on hand; it has corrected several small but vexing problems and is better than having to return a machine that you like. The disk is P# DMR-ES15 U5-319, available from Panasonic Tech Support (which continues to be outstanding).

Note: (added Jun 17) Received a new (replacement) remote as promised, see addendum at end of this review. One could not ask for better support.
- - - -

For those of you who hate the ES15, I feel your pain. My first one was a frustrating dud; I exchanged it and the second one worked perfectly . . . well, almost. After a while the "Delete" feature stopped working, but a firmware update disk from Panasonic fixed that (it arrived in just three days). Panasonic's tech support has been excellent, outstanding even (as has Toshiba's if you need to know).

IMO this S15 is decidedly at the top of the current crop of DVDRs because it has more features and they are more sensible and better laid out than most. It has some nice tweaks up from the S10 but a few (small) backward steps. Graphics and fonts should be better. Remote layout and balance are poor (but who doesn't use a learning remote to get a sensible layout?), no Open/Close button. Console display improved from S10. Good timer features: logical layout, can choose to execute an event or not (great feature but cumbersome to set), phrase list (for titles, a great time saver for me), can do disk and event titles before recording an event, shows alert if inadequate time remains on disk, . . . and more. Has 16 timer slots, I would like 24 or 32. Very bad: thumbnails are too small (eight per page, should be six, four even better). Can't set to go to Top Menu after each title when playing. Can't choose more pleasing title page color(s). Chapter marks should be set during recording. Sometimes two menu steps are used when one or a button would do, or a menu step or two is required even though there's a button on the remote that will do that very thing. Some menu items are redundant. But overall the menu layout is sensible and user-friendly. Though some things could be better, I don't see anything that's completely stupid (as is the case with some, if not most, other brands).

It can remain off or on (output to TV) during timer events, a nice feature. If you want to use two or three of them in the same room, three code sets are available. This may be a good idea because RW (unfinalized) will not transport at all to other brands and RAM disks can be problematic. Wish all manufacturers had gotten together on standards way back when; my experience is that only a finalized (R or RW) disk transports reliably between brands.

So far it has not misfired on a timer event and has done well with all disk flavors that I use: -R, -RW, -RAM (the -RAM was reliable Panasonic to Panasonic only, not reliable Panasonic to Toshiba & reverse). One RAM disk is included.

My advice (I know you just couldn't wait to hear it): when it works, this is a very good machine compared to everything else, at least it's "the best of a bad lot." To try it, buy one from a nearby reliable vendor that has a generous, no questions return policy.

Another way to sum it up: When it's good, it's very good; when it's bad, it's very, very . . . well . . . you know.

Short comparisons:

Toshiba R400: woefully short on features. No thumbnails, title editing is water drip torture, remote's labels are essentially useless (very small, about 1/16") and - now get this - a somewhat dark gray on black. Time Remaining display on timer setup screen is completely wrong except for the first event on a new blank disk. Can't see front inputs from above even with unit at shoulder height. Can't name a disk. No power backup (only 5 seconds). If you use the auto-finalize feature you can't do titles. Graphics and fonts much better than most (including the S15), very clear and pleasing. Panel display is very poor (a lower-case "a" looks like a reversed "6." Remote layout is at best fair, balance good. Do note that it does not have a tuner (if you need one, I don't). Overall it was a big disappointment, I took it back. Toshiba had a real good thing in the D-R4 but have done an admirable job in improving it from almost outstanding to mostly stupid.

Sony: didn't try them, just what I read. No pause button and that stupid up-down timer settings (and slow, about one second per minute so I've read). I didn't try the Sonys because of those two features (no pause button on a machine that should dub selected clips from your VHS - a real genius of a design feature, yes?). Do read about this in reviews on Sony.

Tried a Samsung last year, very short on features and overall a miserable design. Don't know about any others.

Addendum: Just purchased a second ES15, it works perfectly. Had a minor defect in the remote, Panasonic is sending a replacement at no cost and I don't even have to ship the defective one to Panasonic. Outstanding!

Note: an advantage to having two machines of the same brand is that you don't have to finalize anything to play a recording made by one in the other; this was my solution to "using DVDRs like VCRs." The -RW disks fill my need perfectly in this scenario, almost as convenient as VHS tapes.

Addendum Thu Jun 07/07: Yesterday I purchased a third ES15 (don't ask . . . well, if you must know, I have very complicated viewing habits). This morning I gave it a comprehensive test drive and it works perfectly (as does the remote).

If you use a learning remote and have access to an older remote (eg ES10), you can set up an "Open/Close" button, makes life more better. (The Sony RM-VL600 Learning Remote is worth a look if you don't have something already.)

Related info: see my post "Disk Stuff 101"
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