JVC HR-S7600U VCRs
JVC HR-S7600U VCRs
USER REVIEWS
[Jan 14, 2000]
Aaron Seals
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
The HRS7600U has every feature under the sun. I like the movie advance as well as the commercial advance. I love how silent this unit is. Some Hi-Fi's I've had in the past were loud and slow. But then again, I've never owned a Super-VHS! I might of bought the 9600 but I can't see the gold unit with all my black components. Plus the extra money for a 4 meg memory was'nt worth it to me.
Weakness:
I don't like the on-screen display while the tape is rewinding or fast forwarding. I love the quality i get from the S-VHS recordings. The ET feature is kind of silly. I understand it but if you can't afford a S-VHS tape then why did you buy the machine in the first place? But I will buy another one when this one wears out. I only use it when recording from Dolby Digital satellite programs. I'll never buy another Sony Hi-Fi or S-VHS. As far as video viewing goes, Sony is the only thing I would watch TV on. But that's another review!!!!!! Similar Products Used: I've had three Sony Hi-Fi's in the past seven years! |
[Jan 18, 2000]
PL
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Performance is as good as it gets, very good digital comb- filter and Y/C seperator, can pass through a Macrovision encoded signal from DVD or another VCR without distortion (for viewing, not recording)
Weakness:
Nothing, except for $300 something probably suffered and it is not performance, I suspect it is build-quality...time will tell I've held off on buying a S-VHS VCR because I live in an apartment where I can't get DBS, and I figured without DBS there is little reason for S-VHS but...I am now house hunting so I thought I should get one now before I am bogged down with mortgage payments, etc. The first deck I looked at was Sony's $800 S-VHS deck. My uncle has one but advised me not to buy it because his has been in the shop already. I also considered the new Marantz S-VHS but it appears to be a badge-engineered JVC (I could be wrong about this). I wasn't impressed with anything from Mitsubishi, Panasonic, or Sharp so JVC it is. Since I was prepared to spend much more I was going to buy the 9600, until I seen what eCost was charging for the 7600. That $180 difference is nearly 2/3rds the price of the 7600, and the only upgrade I would make use of is the 4MB frame buffer. Recordings made on both machines look exactly the same. In fact, these JVCs have a bit more resolution than my uncle's Sony and my friend's $600 Toshiba (which is no longer in production). As mentioned above, the comb-filter and Y/C seperator are great, clearly better than the comb-filter on my TV (Panasonic SuperFlat). With a cable feed, it is just a bit softer than my TV, but with absolutely no hanging dots. I don't mind giving up a little resolution for a cleaner picture. It also vastly improves my daughter's N64, making it look almost like a PC game. Another benefit is my TV looks better with different contrast settings for S-Video, standard video, and RF. Now I feed my TV with a single S-Video cable eliminating the problem entirely. Similar Products Used: Toshiba and Hitachi HiFi VHS, Sony S-VHS |
[Jan 26, 2000]
Vlad
Casual Listener
Strength:
Can record in S-VHS mode on a regular VHS tape
Weakness:
Too many. See in the summary below. I am probably the only one who is dissatisfied with this product here. Similar Products Used: Panasonic VCR |
[Feb 17, 2000]
Howard Sun
Audiophile
Strength:
Good Picture and Audio quality. LCD display is slick.
Weakness:
Extremely inconvenient. Terrible home integration for the couch potato. Painfully sharp control buttons damages fingertips - a lawsuit waiting to happen. Too expensive for what you get. JVC is in the stone age when it comes to convenience. Even with one of their best models, the HR-S7600U, I was appalled by the design flaws. Similar Products Used: Sony HiFi VCR, Zeinith VCR |
[Feb 18, 2000]
David
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
2MB digital memory for picture enhancement and to allow lo-fi audio to play during FF and Rew.
Weakness:
Build quality (afflicts most VCRs today) I bought this VCR after my cherished JVC HRS-7000U finally died from video-head-old-age. The 7000U was the first S-VHS VCR that JVC made for the US consumer market and one of the first (if not THE first) S-VHS VCRs available to home consumers period--back around 1987 or so. Similar Products Used: JVC HRS-7000U SVHS VCR |
[Feb 18, 2000]
Stan
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
I'm still trying to determine.
Weakness:
Same comment as above, only I'm not sure I really understand how to use all the features this deck has. I've had my 7600 since October. I haven't used it all that much. I have noticed that it tends to show alot of details and has a great picture, but it seems to wash out, or smear the facial, or skin tones. Details in the background and individual hair strands my look very clear but the skin looks blurred. There does not seem to be any compatibility with other VCR's, either Panasonic or even older model JVC's. If I record on the old JVC it looks like crap on the 7600. If I record on the 7600 it looks like crap on the old JVC or Panasonic and vice versa. It makes you wonder if you got a defective machine. If anyone has had similar experiences, please advise, maybe I don't have the settings right or something. It's hard to believe that such an advanced, supposedly quality VCR doesn't make a tape that will work in another VCR. The remote is OK, but it lacks some obvious buttons that it should have, since it's supposed to be universal. It's hard to imagine that JVC thought it would be a good idea to have to hold down two buttons to adjust your tv with the vcr remote. I'm still determined to hang with this thing hoping that it's me instead of it. I've been happy with the other JVC products I have had and still have. I'm hoping for the best with this one. Besides, it's too late to return it. Similar Products Used: Panasonic |
[Nov 21, 2000]
Scott
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
Great video quality and easy to use.
Weakness:
Noisy and Commerical Advance SUCKS! Purchased this product brand new. Within 1 month the VCR started to jam tapes when ejecting. It would also spit out tapes (even brand new ones) after insertion. VCR would also rewind itself for no apparent reason. Exchanged the VCR 3 times at Good Guys. The last VCR exchanged worked for 3 months until warranty expired. Had VCR repaired 4 times through Good Guys after that. Finally I received a brand new VCR which has no problems at all. |
[Mar 27, 2000]
Paul McCartney
Audio Enthusiast
Strength:
S-VHS ET, video enhancement circuitry, smooth playback at a variety of speeds
Weakness:
time shift recording issues, noisy at times This VCR is very good in terms of video quality. The picture on a S-VHS or S-VHS ET recorded tape is nearly as good as the source (e.g., Directv). Similar Products Used: JVC HR-S4500U, Panasonic 4664 |
[Mar 30, 2000]
Bobby North
Casual Listener
Strength:
Fantastic picture quality and sound quality.
Weakness:
Awful remote.Very noisy on rewind and fast forward,Claims I first wanted to Buy the JVC7500 after reading several |
[Mar 18, 2000]
Brian
Audio Enthusiast
I have dubbed DVDs from my Apex AD-600A (with macrovision disabled) in SVHS ET mode and the picture quality and color depth is great. I picked this model because it was a full-width model and matched my other rack componenents in size. The 4600 was shorter. This is the Ferrari of VCR design. Oh and Peter, I agree about the Bose comment. :) |