Sony RDR-GX300 DVD Recorder

Sony RDR-GX300 DVD Recorder

Our Price - $599.99

Availability - Currently Unavailable

 

Sony RDR-GX300 DVD Recorder

Sony's new RDR-GX300 DVD Recorder is the component moment you have been waiting for. Record to DVD from your television and see the difference digital technology makes. The RDR-GX300 features DVD+RW/-RW/-R DVD Format Recording Compatibility, Precision Cinema Progressive 480P for Playback, 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 with 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.

 

Created for first-time users, Sony's RDR-GX300 DVD recorder offers the widest selection of recording and viewing choices available, handling both DVD+RW/+R and DVD-RW/-R discs. It even includes an IR blaster for satellite and cable-box control. Instead of fumbling with 2 remote controls when using the timer function to record your favorite programs, the RDR-GX300's remote lets you select the channel directly from your set-top box(es).

An easy-to-use graphical user interface (GUI) grants easy recording from broadcast programs via off-air antenna, cable, or satellite receivers. Recording features include chasing playback and simultaneous recording and playback (in DVD-RW VR mode) for a greater recording and viewing flexibility. Chasing playback lets you rewind the recorded material while a program is still recording to view and catch up to the real time recording. Simultaneous recording and playback lets you watch pre-recorded content while recording new content to the same disc.

The RDR-GX300 also features Time Base Correction, pre-frame noise reduction, and pre-video equalizer technologies that rebalance and equalize video content before it's recorded onto a DVD, improving the original source content even before the encoding process begins. In the output phase, the RDR-GX300 recorder combines frame noise reduction, block noise reduction, and video equalizer technologies to produce a rich and textured visual with minimal picture interference from background artifacts or distortion.

Finally, the recorder offers proprietary DVD playback technology called Precision Cinema Progressive, which incorporates Pixel-by-Pixel I/P Conversion technology to augment and balance DVD-video elements. You'll need a high-definition or HD-ready television to appreciate this process. A 12-bit/108 MHz video D/A converter ensures exceptional picture quality for an unforgettable viewing experience, while audio decoding occurs at an amazing 192 kHz/24-bits.

What's in the Box
DVD recorder/player, remote control, remote batteries, a user's manual, stereo analog audio interconnect/composite-video cable, and an RF coaxial video cable.

 

Sony RDR-GX300 DVD Recorder Accessories

The Ten Commandments (50th Anniversary Collection)
Field of Dreams (Widescreen Two-Disc Anniversary Edition)

 

Sony RDR-GX300 DVD Recorder Reviews

We bought our Sony DVD Recorder a couple of years ago and spent nearly $300. A friend of mine bought this product last year and it is happening to hers also. Please do not waste your money. Now because of the latest DVD copyright enhancements, newer DVDs won't even PLAY. This has happened to Knocked Up, The Bourne Ultimatum, Saw IV and others. This may have been a great product when it was first introduced but it will not play newer DVDs.

 

So important when using a burner for television shows. and smart it is. Also, I remember finding blank dvds was super easy since this burner uses practically every type of burnable dvd (unlike other burners). recording. What makes me love this dvd play more than the invention of dvds itself is how absolutely reliable, complex (yet simple). I quickly grew tired of messing with commercials and just chucked the burnable dvds. One good thing I remember for the few weeks I used the recorder (on a daily basis btw) was the inimitable "Record PAUSE" button. After over a year together, I love this player.

I bought this burner to record my favorite shows off of my DVR instead of having to buy the "show DVDs" that are $60 a season. It is like the "Super DVD Player." I've had maybe 4 or 5 other players since dvds became popular and this Sony player has every option, every advantage, every idea I could want. But. So I never use this recorder for.

 

I did mention it was an open box right. It works flawlessly. I paid about $90. bucks for it. It wouldnt record on all formats and finally the slot wouldnt even open to load disk any more.

I dont even have the instructions but when youve worked with a few of them, the features are pretty simple to figure out. I have no problems and i figure i'll have this for a few years. I bought this item 5/06/06 from circuit city. It was an open box item. Let me first say that i bought a panasonic a couple of years ago for about $500.

I pawned it. This unit RDRGX300 is remarkable.

 

Only one out of 25 were bad. 5 out of 25 were bad, and the unit messed up the recording.

However, I have had problems with the Sony blank CD-Rs I bought. Now, I wonder if it was the unit instead of the discs.

Now, the unit will not play any disc - not the movies it recorded and not the store bought titles. The next blank set of 25 I purchesed were Phillips.

Until now I couldn't have been happier. I bought this unit in Oct.

2004.

 

Don't take my word for it, before you buy Sony, google "Sony disk error" and see how many hits you get. After owning this product for little over a year, it fails to read any disk. Costs could be $300.00 or more. I don't see myself ever purchasing another Sony product. Brand new disks (straight from the packaging) even generate this message now.

Best case scenario was over $120.00 plus shipping. I realize things do not last forever, but modern electronic equipment should function longer than 18months. All disks, commercial, -r, -rw,+rw, even disks it has created on it's own, generate the "disk error" message. Don't buy SONY. The most knowledgeable claim the problem is a faulty laser assembly, which Sony is aware of but refuses to make right.

Or course then they could keep the paperweight and I could tell them not to repair it. Sony was uninterested in assisting me, simply telling me to send the unit in, at my cost and they would let me know what it will cost for repairs.

 
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