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Sony RDR-GX7 DVD Recorder
  • DVD+RW/-RW/-R DVD Format Recording Compatibility
  • Precision Cinema Progressive 480P for Recording and Playback
  • One Touch Dubbing for DV/D8 Via i.LINK Interface
  • User Friendly Graphic User Interface
  • Variable Bit Rate for Adjustable Recording Times (60-360 Minutes)

It is the component moment you have been waiting for. Sony’s RDR-GX7 DVD Recorder is available now! Record to DVD from your television and see the difference digital technology makes. You’ll experience the benefits of DVD+RW/-RW/-R DVD Format Recording Compatibility, Precision Cinema Progressive 480P for Playback, One Touch Dubbing for DV/D8 Via i.LINK Interface, and a User Friendly Graphic User Interface. The Timer Recording feature and Adjustable Recording Times (60-360 Minutes) enable simple TV to DVD recording. Additional features include a Variable Bit Rate for Linear and Non-Linear Editing, Video DAC with 108Mhz processing w/NSV, a 192 kHz 24 Bit Digital to Analog Converter, a Dolby Digital and dts Optical/Coaxial Output, and TV Virtual Surround with 4 Surround Modes. Invite your family into the digital age with the RDR-GX7.Sony RDR-GX7 component DVD recorder is the world’s first standalone, dual-RW (DVD-R/-RW and DVD+R/+RW) home DVD player/recorder. Its format versatility gives you nearly complete recording and viewing freedom–the flexibility to create or view optical media for or from most computer DVD recorders. Further, the machine can accommodate the recordable optical formats required by any of your friends and family, regardless of their DVD players (though some older players do not play recordable media).

The RDR-GX7′s sophisticated camcorder control capabilities lets you manage a range of dubbing and editing functions when you connect a Digital Handycam or Digital8 camcorder through the i.LINK (IEEE 1394) interface. One-touch dubbing fosters easy tape-to-disc conversion, and you can delete unwanted scenes or make a compilation of your favorite scenes with flexible editing functions such as program edit and advanced program edit.

Several picture-enhancing technologies are aimed at creating high-quality recordings, especially when transferring images from video sources such as VHS or 8 mm camcorders. The unit can play back DVD-RW, DVD+RW, DVD-R, DVD+R, CD, CD-R and CD-RW discs–offering a wealth of musical enjoyment alongside its extensive video capabilities.

The playback capability of the DVD recorder is said to be comparable to the high-end DVD players in Sony’s acclaimed ES line. The player/recorder delivers stunning home-theater effects through a variety of high-performance features that optimize picture quality and effectively remove noise, such as a 12-bit, 108 MHz video digital-to-analog converter with Noise Shaped Video technology, motion-adaptive field noise reduction, pre-frame noise reduction, and pre-video equalizer technologies. Variable bit-rate MPEG encoding ensures maximum efficiency and recording time (60 to 360 minutes) for all applicable DVD media.

Whether your living room is currently home to an HDTV or you’re merely thinking of “someday,” the RDR-GX7 stands ready to deliver the full potential of your DVDs. Progressive scanning, referred to as 480p for the number of horizontal lines that compose the video image, creates a picture using twice the scan lines of a conventional DVD picture, giving you higher resolution and sharper images while eliminating nearly all motion artifacts. Using Sony’s Precision Cinema Progressive technology, the recorder also encodes your DV (digital video) input sources in pristine 480p formatting.

During playback, the RDR-GX7 also performs 3:2 pulldown. DVD mastering introduces a common distortion when adjusting 24-frames-per-second movies to 30 fps video; 3:2 pulldown digitally corrects this distortion, removing the redundant information to display a film-frame-accurate picture. Top-of-the-line component-video outputs help minimize digital and line-scan artifacts on compatible advanced televisions, while composite- and S-video outputs bring compatibility with nearly any television.

Two sets of left/right analog-audio inputs and one set of outputs channel audio to Dolby Pro Logic receivers and stereo televisions. Both Dolby Digital and DTS 5.1-channel surround-sound signals can be routed through the player’s digital-audio outputs (one each of RCA coaxial and Toslink optical) for direct connection to a full-featured audio/video receiver.

Despite its advanced functionality, the RDR-GX7′s intelligent onscreen graphical user interface (GUI) is entirely user-friendly, helping you create personal DVD titles with thumbnail pictures and operate the recorder through the sophisticated Remote Commander remote control. There’s no need to cue or rewind tape here, so accessing precise points in your programming is nearly effortless.

What’s in the Box
DVD player/recorder, user’s manual, audio/video cord, 75-ohm coaxial video cable, Remote Commander remote control, and two AA batteries.

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5 Comments
  • vladimir yelbaev
    March 5, 2010
    #1
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    Let’s face it. Major name brands compete at close quarters and come up with lookalike quality recorders packed with easy features and detailed manuals, aka OEM. Shopping in your country is technically foolproof, so why this Sony, not a Toshiba or Philips? I’d go for it ‘cos I know Sony subscribes to esthetics (and runs business) of CBS/Columbia. That means special imaging and sound “coloration”. Being mad about Johnny Cash and Chicago LPs does a lot for picking a Sony video when need be. Another market contender’d be a PC-built-in “DVD writer” (which is cheaper!) or an HDD-equipped “new generation” recorder. Till date I never liked the flat nature of an HDD film copies though. I suspect such copying’d call for picture temperature correction and that’s wrong, artificial. Last not least, I’ll consider the Sony engineering accuracy, sturdy construction, lasting mechanics, error-protection, fast operation and noise free picture in whatever mode. OEM designs are not as equal as they seem.

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  • Anonymous
    March 5, 2010
    #2
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    I havent used this product but have been doing plenty of reading about it. This recorder stands out from the others as it supports recording in 2 of the 3 major DVD recording formats. Much like the competition between betamax and vhs, there is competition between the (1)DVD-R/-RW, (2)DVD+R/+RW and (3)DVD-RAM recording formats. The RDR-GX7 records in DVD-R/RW and DVD+RW formats, thus helping to avoid potential compatibility issues in the future. Most DVD recorders record using a red laser (and pretty much all players use the red laser). However, there is now a blue laser format which is different again (of which there are 2 of these blue laser formats, 1 of which is supported by Sony and the other companies in the so called “DVD+RW Alliance”) and which stores between 5 to 10 times more data than red laser recorders such as this one. The first blue laser dvd video recorder to be released comes from Sony, which will only play DVD-R/RW discs (and will record to seperate ‘blue-ray’ discs). So the reason i like this recorder (the rdr-gx7 red laser recorder above) is because it supports 2 different dvd recording formats. The benefit of this is therefore that you are less likely to be purchasing a recorder that will be obselete in the near future, as no one can be sure whether DVD-R/RW or DVD+R/+RW will be the winning format of the future, and i believe (though don’t quote me on this) that DVD-RAM for dvd video recording will not be a winner for reasons i won’t go into. And with this recorder, you can also record to DVD-R/-RW that will be compatible with the new blue laser recorder (however blue laser recorders from other companies may support DVD+R/RW and/or DVD-R/RW). So if you want to straddle the fence on this issue, and not buy a burner only supporting one of the recording formats, this appears to be the recorder to buy. I choose it due to the fact that i have not seen any indicators as to which format is ‘winning’ the dominance contest. Also, the fact that Sony is part of the DVD+RW Alliance, yet doesnt support DVD+RW in its blue laser recorder, is even more evidence that you should get a recorder supporting both formats. Not having used the product, i decided to give it a rating of 3, but my guess is i would rate it higher if i had one.

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  • Andrew I. Munro Sr.
    March 5, 2010
    #3
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    Having read the glowing reviews on Amazon, I purchased this machine and am terribly disappointed at it’s performance. My main reason for selecting this model was that it uses DVD-RW format, amongst others. On inserting a disc, it tries to format it and then rejects it – saying ‘dirty disc’ on the display. I have tried several brands and have had the same issue. I even took my discs to a local retail store and got the same error message on their machine. Yes, I could purchase DVD+RW’s and try those, but I don’t feel like investing anymore time or money on a machine that fails to live up to it’s hype. Shame on you Sony !

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  • Asife Entertainment
    March 5, 2010
    #4
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    BUT; U KANT TAKE THE DVDs U’VE RECORDED ON THE SONY RDR-GX7 AND EDIT THEM IN YOUR PC. I DON’T KNOW, MAYBE I’M USING THE WRONG SOFTWARE. MAYBE I’LL TRY ADOBE LIVE MOTION INSTEAD OF SONIC’S MyDVD SOFTWARE THAT CAME WITH MY SONY DRU-500A RW DRIVE IN MY PC. BUT EVEN WITH THIS LITTLE DRAWBACK, I JUST LUV THIS THING. I RECORD THREE SHOWS OFF OF TVLAND EVERYDAY WHICH IN TOTAL IS THREE HOURS LONG. I RECORD THEM EACH IN LP MODE AND MY PICTURE QUALITY STILL SEEMS HARDLY SACRAFICED. I BOUGHT IT IN MAY-2004 FOR $498. IT SURE BEAT THE $799 PRICE TAG SONY HAD ON IT AT THEIR OWN WEBSITE. I WOULDN’T TRADE THIS THING FA NUTTN!!!

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  • bluemamba
    March 5, 2010
    #5
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    I keep buying Sony products because I have convinced myself that audio quality and perhaps picture quality is the best on the market. So I keep telling myself to put up with all of the flaws and limitations and there are many! First flaw – SUSCEPTIBILTY TO BREAKDOWN. (And, no, I handle everything with care!) All Sony products I have owned – VCRS, tvs, discmen, walkmen, stereos, headphones – break down more easily than others – average lifespan about 6 months to 1 year before the first breakdown. Other products last several years before needing repair if any – I’ve had a Kenwood stereo that has lasted me dince 1987 and is still going strong; I had a GE TV that lasted 11 years before I replaced it with a Sony flatscreen in 2002. My Pioneer laserdisc player has lasted since 1996. I have a Panasonic dvd player that has done fine for 5 years. After Hitachis plummeted bigtime I started buying Sony vcrs in the mid-nineties and put up with the frequent trips to Circuit City repair because they played my older tapes better than any other. But I have very little reason to buy Sony products from now on. First, the newer SLV-N500 VCRs are flimsy and the picture is worse. And finally I’ll get to the dvd players because that is what we’re dealing with here. I bought a Sony multi-disc DVP-NC600 in 2002 and have already made three trips to repair it. Now we come to the second flaw in Sony products – SENSITIVITY. When I first bought the NC600 I immediately had trouble with it playing dvds that my Panasonic had no problem playing whatsoever. Almost every other dvd – even the new ones, the unblemished ones, ones with the faintest of marks – would be declared dirty, unplayable, would freeze, would skip back. I handled them on their edges, I kept them in their cases, I babied them. I stuck with the Sony dvd player because I could immediately tell that through my Sony headphones the audio for, say, Moulin Rouge, was better than in my Panasonic. Unfortunately, I got tired of wiping M. Rouge off with a tissue every ten minutes and putting it back in the Sony whereas it plays perfectly in the Panasonic. Ditto with many other dvds. When it finally came time to get a dvd recorder, I considered the RDR-GX7 but knowing it would give me a headache with skipping and freezing I went with the Panasonic DMR-E80H with the 80GB hard drive. Everything was perfect until it kept giving me power troubles. Finally, in just a matter of 3 weeks, the E80H blew up on me. Rather than consider the possibility of having a bad egg and swapping for another Panasonic I went with the Sony. My #1 priority, after all, was converting old videotapes to dvd-r and I read and felt from experience that the picture/sound quality was sure to be better. I could always play the dvds I made with the Sony on other dvd players. And the picture/sound quality is superb, I admit. Quite frankly, there is not so much skipping/freezing going on so far in the eight months I have had it. But there is some, too many skips for a unit that is overpriced….OK, next flaw – COPYGUARDS. The RDR-GX7 is slave to both the Macrovision and CGMS/A. I don’t care what the MPAA shoves down the consumers’ throats – this organization which years ago wanted to ban the VCR and made ridiculous rhetorical comparisons likening the VCR to the Boston Strangler and threatens private collectors who just want to trade material like old tv shows, failed pilots, footage interviews, etc THAT IS NOT COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLE!!!!!! – is run by a bunch of BULLIES. A person has every right to make a back-up copy of a store-bought dvd he or she OWNS – these Sonys are scratching up dvds left and right. A person has every right to make compilations for one’s own PRIVATE USE – some of us were film students and needed to make compilations for projects or some of us as a hobby do like to make compilations of actors’ scenes or music scenes or whatever one pleases. One also ought to be allowed to make dvd-r copies of old commercial tapes that ARE NOT AVAILABLE on dvd! THERE IS NOTHING MORALLY WRONG WITH THIS!!! It’s all about the MPAA members being kept from buying a few extra yachts. Off my soapbox I go. Next flaw – this may seem like nitpicking but anybody who uses these things a lot is probably getting aggravated by this, too. THE RDR-GX7 IS SLOW – LOADING DISC DATA, WRITING DISC DATA, OPENING/CLOSING – it takes forever. Whenever I record off of live tv I am always making a backup VHS recording because I know I can’t trust this dvd recorder. I’ve only used the timer a couple of times and everything looked set and ready to go, and a brand new formatted disc was in the drive, and both times I woke up the next morning and got an “unplayable disc error.” So I haven’t used the timer since. But when I am there monitoring the recording I still make the backup because many times it will be recording and suddenly stop and declare a brand new clean disc dirty or unplayable, and then a big white square pops up on the screen “Writing Disc Data” and you have to sit there and wait several seconds and by then you’ve lost a chunk of the program. “WDD” message pops up on the screen everytime you stop the recording to, say, change modes or accidentally hit the stop or whatever – it’s unnecessary. The player also automatically loads if you have a disc in there – not a big inconvenience but still I’m noting it here as another flaw because it is “loading disc data” for several seconds and you can’t get those seconds of your life back. And I’ll nitpick further – get rid of the big white boxes containing error messages or finalizing messages or whatever that hog the middle of the screen – some of us are trying to watch tv! I keep my cable running through my Sony VCR underneath the dvd recorder because – as I said – I only feel safe simulataneously making VHS and DVD copies because the RDR-GX7 cannot be trusted as I explained above. I’ve about had it with Sony..

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