Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Network-Ready Home Entertainment » Audio & Video Accessories » ReplayTV RTV5504 40-Hour Digital Video Recorder  
Categories
Car Audio & Video
CD Players & Recorders
Compact Stereos
DIRECTV
DJ Equipment
DVD Players
Equalizers
Home Theater Systems
Minidisc Players & Recorders
iPods & MP3 Players
Network-Ready Home Entertainment
Radio Scanners
Receivers & Amplifiers
Satellite Radio
Shortwave & All-Hazard Radios
Speakers
Tape Decks
Tuners
Turntables
TVs & HDTVs
Two-Way Radios
VCRs
Samsung 32 inch LCD HDTV

Samsung 32 inch
LCD HDTV


ReplayTV RTV5504 40-Hour Digital Video Recorder

ReplayTV RTV5504 40-Hour Digital Video Recorder

zoom enlarge 

Other Views:
Brand: ReplayTV
Category: CE

Buy New: $140.00 (On sale from $159.95)
You Save: $19.95 (12%)



New (1) Used (3) from $99.00

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 145 reviews

Media: Electronics
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Size: 40-Hour
Shipping Weight (lbs): 12
Dimensions (in): 14 x 16.9 x 3

MPN: RTV5504
Model: 5504
UPC: 018258550413
EAN: 0018258550413
ASIN: B0000BYRIN

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • ReplayTV service subscription is either a $12.95 monthly fee or $299.99 one-time lifetime fee; discounted $6.95 monthly fee is available for consumers with more than one active unit
  • 40-hour personal video recorder with theme record for capturing programs based on keywords or themes
  • Built-in home networking capabilities via Ethernet; no extra costs to network
  • Pause live-action TV shows, jump back 7 seconds for instant replay, enjoy high-quality slow-motion and fast forward effects
  • Send programs between ReplayTV units in your home; blaze past annoying ads in 30-second increments with QuickSkip

Accessories:

  • Monster Cable MP HTS800 Home Theater PowerCenter HTS800
  • Monster Cable MV2F-2M Monster Video 2 High Resolution Video Cable with F-Pin Connectors (6.6 Feet)
  • Sanus Systems VCR/DVD Shelf for Accurate View Turntables
  • Recoton T124 2-Line Triplex Jack
  • Monster Cable ULT V1000 CV-4 THX Ultra 1000 Component Video Cable

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Hands-On Review
You've heard the hype, but just how well does ReplayTV actually work? We tried the RTV5504 ourselves just to find out, and its performance was better than we'd imagined. It's great to be able to pause and replay live television. Even better: apart from gotta-watch-it news and sports, "live TV" is something ReplayTV users no longer have to think about. The RTV5504 puts all that's good in the TV universe at your beck and call, recording and storing content from TV, satellite, antenna, or external sources like DTV receivers and camcorders on its spacious, 40 GB hard drive. While watching either live or recorded TV you can freeze an image, advance frame-by-frame, watch in slow motion, or view at 2x to 20x normal speed.

What's more, the RTV5504 is home-network-capable, letting you hook it up with additional 5500 Series recorders for multi-room convenience and/or link it to your PC for viewing custom slide shows of your digital photos. Not a cable or satellite user? Not to worry--there's an RF antenna input on the rear panel, just like on your TV. Just understand that the quality of your recordings can never surpass the quality of your reception. If you're using a satellite receiver, a supplied IR blaster will correctly configure the receiver to feed the ReplayTV recorder your desired programs at the correct times.

Some basics: 40 GB holds 14 to 40 hours of programming, depending on the quality setting you select (standard, medium, or high). Use of the unit requires ReplayTV service, to which you can subscribe on a monthly basis ($12.95) or pay up front for lifetime access ($299.99). The ReplayTV recorder requires regular scheduling updates via either standard analog phone line (RJ-11 cable provided) or broadband cable modem (router or access point and/or Ethernet cable not included).

But once it's set up, using it and appreciating it couldn't be any easier. Before you record anything, ReplayTV delivers real-time, onscreen scheduling information for everything in your area, making paper guides unnecessary and taking all the guesswork out of channel surfing. The channel guide shows program names, program durations, and even offers short descriptions or summaries for each program.

ReplayTV's best features all stem from its ability to capture shows you're interested in, either one by one, categorically (all shows of a given title or in a given time slot), or by theme (baseball, music videos, romantic comedies, action movies, documentaries, dance, you name it). You can also search by actor, director, title, or description, and set the unit to capture anything that fits your queries. ReplayZones let you browse all scheduling for the next two weeks by seven primary categories and countless subcats within each category, a terrific way to discover programs you'd never think to look for.

You can set recordings to start early or end late or skip broadcasts on any day of the week, one of many options for settling the inevitable recording conflicts. If you walk into a live broadcast you decide you want to keep, you can schedule on the fly to save the remainder of that program.

The recorder shines most brightly in active use: navigating, viewing, and managing (resume playback/keep/delete) recorded programming. The QuickSkip button is indispensable, bumping you a commercial-appropriate 30 seconds forward with each press. If you first enter a number, such as 15, QuickSkip will take you forward an equivalent number of minutes, making it easy to hunt for a specific section of a program.

Another essential feature is the ability to watch a recorded program while another recording is in progress. And, by turning the unit off (the hard drive is always on, even if the power is ostensibly off), you can watch a live program on one channel via your TV tuner while ReplayTV records another program on a different channel.

At a minimum, all quality settings are what we would call "watchable." In the "high" setting, picture and sound quality are both excellent, if still slightly inferior to the raw signal. (If your TV is HD-ready, using the unit's progressive-scan video outputs should result in an improvement, however.) Using the medium and standard settings greatly expands the recorder's storage capacity, which--trust us--you'll probably find yourself wanting a lot sooner than you think. Let's face it: a dip in audio/video quality is a small price to pay for the programming discoveries and incredible conveniences afforded by this device. --Michael Mikesell

Pros:

  • Lets you easily prioritize and manage the TV you want to watch
  • Intuitive operation
  • Can play one recorded program while capturing another
  • Well-designed remote control
  • Myriad options for choosing and discovering programs to record
  • Extensive options for navigating recorded content quickly and easily
  • Makes it easy to skip commercials
  • Switches quickly between menus and programming

Cons:

  • Best-quality image (live or recorded) is slightly inferior to the source signal
  • May require use of a video amplifier when feeding a cable signal directly to the unit

What's in the Box One ReplayTV RTV5504 PVR, a remote control, remote batteries, a user's manual, an RF coaxial video cable, a composite-video/stereo analog audio interconnect, an IR blaster cable, a 9-to-15-pin adapter, an RJH-to-9-pin adapter, and an RJ-11 phone cable.

Amazon.com Product Description
The RTV5504 personal video recorder, or PVR, delivers the ability to pause and replay live TV while recording and storing 40 hours of digital, tapeless audio and video--about a season's worth of memory for four hour-long programs. Enjoy a broadband or phone-line connection to the ReplayTV service and convenient home networking through a built-in Ethernet port--there's no extra hardware required. Subscription to ReplayTV service is available either as a $12.95 monthly fee or a one-time lifetime fee of $299.99; a discounted $6.95 monthly fee is available for consumers with more than one active unit.

ReplayTV's 5500 Series is the most powerful and flexible PVR yet.
With the RTV5504 and the other models in the 5500 Series, ReplayTV has made major revisions, enhancing its feature base while removing certain contentious features found on previous models. ReplayTV's 5.0 software adds four powerful features: recording priority, which identifies recording conflicts and lets you decide which shows to record; network recording, which identifies conflicts and automatically assigns recordings to a home-networked ReplayTV with available hard-disk storage; pause and resume, which lets you pause a movie in the living room and finish watching it in the bedroom; and First-Run Recordings, which records only the new episodes and skips the repeats.

A PVR makes it simple to record favorite shows without the complicated programming requirements of VCRs and without videotape hassles. A PVR frees you from fixed TV schedules so you can watch what you want, when you want. Because ReplayTV uses digital recording to store television and/or cable broadcasts on a hard drive as you're watching, you'll also be able to control live television. You can pause live TV to take a telephone call, rewind to see a scene again, use instant replay to jump back seven seconds, or watch a scene in slow-motion.

Remote is well laid out and easy to read.
ReplayTV connects nightly to the ReplayTV Service to download the latest channel-guide information. Use this intuitive guide and the main system menu to follow simple--and in many cases, one-button--prompts. A feature called theme record automatically records shows using keywords or themes that you supply. You can also search for programs by keyword, helping to discover programs you might not have known about otherwise. If you forget to program your receiver to record a show before you leave for vacation, no worries: you can access your ReplayTV over the Web and program it from anywhere using MyReplayTV.

With multiple ReplayTV 5500-series models in a home connected via their built-in Ethernet ports, you can bounce programs around the house to different PVRs or to send digital photos between your PC and your ReplayTV units. And, like the 5000 Series, the 5500 Series still offers the option for broadband connectivity, which at this time consists of the future potential (via upgradeable firmware) to send non-copyrighted material across the Internet to other ReplayTV units and, possibly, to computers. The 5500 Series units network seamlessly with 5000 Series units.

And while ReplayTV has removed the Send Show and Automatic Commercial Advance features, the 5500 Series retains the QuickSkip and high-speed fast-forward buttons, so you'll still have considerable flexibility in your playback viewing. At the touch of a button, QuickSkip hops through a recorded program in 30-second increments--great for news features you don't care to watch and, yes, for bypassing the less interesting commercials out there. The fast-forward button scans at up to 20 times normal speed.

Built-in Ethernet port allows for convenient home networking.

Other features include room-to-room streaming between networked ReplayTVs, a progressive-scan output (for seamless, flicker-free displays on high-definition and HD-ready TVs), an optical digital-audio output (for direct connection with a compatible AV receiver), parental control (including channel blocking), show organizer, manual record, show extender (which lets you manually extend the start or end times of a recording).

What's in the Box
One ReplayTV RTV5504 PVR, a remote control, remote batteries, a user's manual, a coaxial video cable, a composite-video/stereo analog audio interconnect, an IR blaster cable, a 9-to-15-pin adapter, an RJH-to-9-pin adapter, and an RJ-11 phone cable.

Product Description
The ReplayTV 5504 has everything that makes DVRs great and advance features that make it the best DVR available today.


Customer Reviews:   Read 140 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Terrible Service Ruins Everything   March 6, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

When my ReplayTV worked, it was great. (Though now having tried others, it was worse--except for those few features, like commercial skip, that they took out anyway.) But every single time I had to get support from them, it was an awful experience.

Most recently, I just called for my third time (at least a 20 minute wait each time) to try and cancel my service. You can't cancel on-line--it's the only thing you can't cancel on line. Somehow, that charge never stopped coming. 4 months and counting. This time around, assuming they do actually cancel the service, they refused to even consider refunding the other three months.

Whenever there were problems with the unit, their technical support was incompetent. The only advantage they has was they knew the service codes for the remote, but once I found them on-line, their support was useless. I'm a competent computer person, not a geek, but I was better than they were.

On two occasions, my service stopped, with them claiming that they couldn't charge my card. (It was a "glitch" in their system each time) I went a week without being able to use it, and they didn't credit my account. Then, when I got my new ATM card, I changed it with them. On-line, the change was reflected, but they kept charging the old. Eventually the old one expired, and they didn't even have the patience to let me explain what was wrong; they kept insisting they had made the change. That was two weeks without the use of my unit, no refund for time lost.

I'm using Comcast's DVR now, and it's almost as good, and--I can't believe I'm saying this--their customer service is far superior. Last time I called for help, the woman asked if she could find some specials for me, and 5 minutes later, she had lowered my cable/Internet bill by $40. And later this year, Comcast is switching to TiVo software.

In Sum: even if you think the ReplayTV is a bit better (debatable), you better pray you never have to call them, because then it just won't be worth it.



5 out of 5 stars ReplayTV is THE Best!   December 4, 2006
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

One of my ReplayTV boxes is a 4500 model purchased in 2002. It has NEVER needed repair. On the RARE occasion (less than a Windows-based computer) it hangs, just reboot it by pushing and holding the power button until it reboots itself - instructions are easily found in the manual). In the beginning when I had questions and hadn't read the manual, I found their Tech Support people to be fast, exceptionally helpful, knowledgable, and friendly. The machine is either recording or being watched or both nearly 24/7 and is still going strong after all this time. Love, love, love it! How Tivo users live without commerical advance, commercial skip, or 30-second skip is unfathomable!


1 out of 5 stars NOTHING BUT PROBLEMS   April 19, 2006
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

im not going to write a long review on this. i've had mine for about 6 month now and it has broken down 3 times!! everything was coverd under warrenty but each time i have to ship it back,it takes about a month to get back. imagin having to re-enter your shows...three times..not having a dvr for a month 3 times. i had a tivo before...now i kick my self for not buying another one when they still had the life time subscriptions.


5 out of 5 stars Both units working great for over 2 years.   March 11, 2006
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Believe what you want. Both of mine have been working for over 2 years and both were refurbs. I really love commercial skip. Best feature they ever added. I have had 1 unit hang twice you simple unplug it and it solves the problem. Also have a tivo and can say there is no comparison. Replay wins hands down.


1 out of 5 stars Can I give it less than one star? ReplayTV is an awful, awful company!   February 23, 2006
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

I had a Panasonic ShowStopper 2000 (made by ReplayTV). I got it in 2000 or 2001. Worked great. Loved the features. Couldn't live without it. Well I decided to upgrade to get some of the newer features, plus my remote was broken and I couldn't find any universal remote I liked, and the thing was just plain sluggish. What a mistake. I should have just stuck with it.

First thing was ReplayTV wouldn't allow me to transfer my lifetime membership from one box to the other. They only give you a discount if you pay by the month. Great another monthly bill. $7 a month for a channel guide they just get from zip2it.com. What a rip off. And this is over my broadband connection. It doesn't cost them anything.

Second, the hardware and software are just flaky. The power button caved into the box. It stutters during playback. Sometimes the audio lags behind the video. It crashes on some of my uploaded JPG files. The picture upload software crashes my PC. Sometimes the ReplayTV itself crashes and even holding the power button down wont reboot it.

Third, the warranty materials and customer support are terrible. The warranty is really only 90 days long. After that you can send it in to be fixed under warranty at a "fixed price". (...)The tech said it was my hard drive. Why is a hard drive dying after 120 days of service?

I love DVR's but the current ReplayTV's are terrible. I'm probably going to lease one from my cable company until someone can make a decent one. Something you can buy for a resonable price ((...)) and no monthly fees. That sounds like my old ShowStopper.






Information about prices, products, services and merchants is provided by third parties and is for informational purposes only. Electronics-vault.com does not represent or warrant the accuracy or reliability of the information and will not be liable for any errors, omissions or delays in this information or any losses, injuries or damages arising from its display or use.

© 2006-2008 Electronics Vault. Brought to you by HostGator.