Strengths:FOUR tuners in ONE box! Mesmerizing picture quality. HD quality w/Tivo convenience...An unbeatable combo! Familiar peanut remote.
Weaknesses:Requires 3-lnb dish upgrade. Cost (see below).
Posted Mar 21, 2005 - When you consider what this box is designed to do, it does it very well...In fact, BETTER than anything else on the market. Anyone who spends time with it and doesn't give an unqualified 5-star rating is either out of their league with this technology or is just one of those who is never satified with anything! There are (unpublished) incentives for existing DirecTV customers to go HD-DVR, but you have to talk to the right people - Customer Retention. If you're a good customer (never late pay, long-term, good history), then you should get a $250 CREDIT on your account once you buy and activate the unit, free or discounted dish upgrade & professional installation, 3 to 6 months free HD programming, 6 months free HBO/Showtime and/or 6 months discounted Premium programming. But you have to ask (demand?) it of the right person in CR, which may take more than one call. (Some associates will tell you there aren't ANY incentives while others give them freely. And a call to the "regular" DirecTV customer service reps WON'T get-r-done!) Since the unit is now available on the Net for around $850, the account credits and incentives bring net cost down to less than $500 ($250 outright credit + $100-$200 in installation/programming incentives)...And here's what you get:
2 satellite HD Tuners, 2 OTA (over-the-air) HD Tuners and a 250GB hard drive...A WHOLE BUNCH of sophisticated hardware that works pretty well, considering it is the MOST state-of-the-art HD component out there! The slow menus don't seem that slow to me, most of the time. If you've filled up the hard drive, and have both active tuners on HD programming, then yes, the menus are going to load slow...Considering the amount of data being processed at one time, this shouldn't come as a shock. Put 1 or both active tuners on channel 0 and menus load faster.
So that's how you reduce the initial cost and speed up the menus. There's nothing else anyone can complain about. If you have an HDTV and it doesn't "work" with this receiver, then you're the 1 out of 100 who has the "wrong" HDTV. Too bad. In order to get the FULL HD and digital effect, you need an HDTV that's equipped with an HDMI input jack or a DVI input jack. Our 50" Samsung DLP has this and it's a simple connection. These cables come with the HD-DVR: HDMI-DVI cable, HDMI cable, Component video cables, S-video cable, Composite A/V cables, 25-foot phone cord...Easily worth $100 total.
If you've had a DirecTV standard digital receiver, then the first thing you'll notice is the IMPROVED SD picture! I'm not sure if it's the new 3-lnb dish, the pure digital connection through DVI or the newer components in the box/tuners that's responsible...But all of these probably combine to give you a clearer SD picture than you've ever received over satellite. When you flip to an OTA or satellite HD channel, well, the image quality is as-advertised! Simply the BEST you can get on a TV now...The channel guide even tells you which programs will be broadcast in HD. My only "complaint" is with HD programming. First, there's not that much (yet) and second, when you're watching an HD (digital) channel that's broadcasting an SD show, they put up ANNOYING side bars on the screen...Sometimes on top and bottom too and it looks like a P-I-P without the original picture! But if you wait until everything with HDTV is "perfect", then you'll be watching it in old age.
If you've laid out $4 Grand or more for an HDTV and you're not watching HD programming...Well, isn't it time? Record 2 HD programs while watching another on Tivo. Try that with ANY other hardware on the market - Can't be done! The seamless integration of the satellite and OTA tuners is beautiful...No awkward switching of wires or feeds, just use the remote. Try to build your own dual-satellite HD and dual-OTA HD receiver with a 250GB Tivo system for an effective cost of less than $500...Just try.
I also recommend the Zenith Silver Sensor for local HD channels. Go to antennaweb.org (a free site) and input your street address. Get a compass to determine where to point your Silver Sensor. Set it up next to a window and check channel reception through the meters in the HD-DVR setup menu...More than likely you'll get most, if not all, of your local HD channels for FREE! If this doesn't work for you, then you'll probably need either an attic-mounted or roof-mounted OTA antenna. But when you consider you'll be getting your local channels and their HD broadcasts for free, it's not a bad investment...And neither is the DirecTV HR10-250.
If you're far enough in front of the curve to have been enjoying Tivo and/or DirecTV for years, then you're cheating yourself by not adding HDTV to the mix...And instead of stacking up and connecting 4 separate tuner boxes in your component cabinet (plus a Tivo unit), this single box does it all...The folks at DirecTV should be commended for bringing this miraculous piece of video equipment to the masses!!
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