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Audio & Video |
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Mitsubishi VHS SVHS Digital VCR HQ HS-HD2000U Studio : MITSUBISHI by MITSUBISHI Brand : Mitsubishi Model : HD2000U Publisher : MITSUBISHI Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days EAN : 0082400017802 UPC : 082400017802 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 3 reviews)
Our Price : $549.00
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Product Description |
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This Mitsubishi's top-of-the-line VCR records and plays back stunning images with HDTV and hi-fi audio quality identical to the original digital broadcast. |
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Home Audio Video Interoperability (HAVi) Never Emerged |
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One of the big selling points of Mitsubishi's WS-55511 high definition television was its ability to digitally connect to a home entertainment system via the HAVi protocol over a single Fireware (IEEE-1934) cable. This HAVi/Firewire connectivity was to eliminate the sea of analog audio and video cables typically used in analog home entertainment systems. Unfortunately, Mitsubishi only produced one HAVi component, a Digital VHS (HS HD2000U) player. I don't know if Mitsubishi or any of the other HAVi members ever sold any other HAVi components in the United States. For HAVi to be successful it needed audio/video receivers, DVD, DVR, satellites, cable boxes, and game consoles. The Mitsubishi WS-55511 without digital HAVi components is left using traditional analog inputs from the same old analog home entertainment system. In short, no digital input for the MPEG decoder in the WS-55511 to decipher. What a bust! |
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best product |
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i love this thing its everything you could wish for the color,sound everything `s beautiful |
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$1K machine for peanuts |
I highly recommend this unit. A couple of years ago, this machine cost $1000. Two months ago, I paid $175. Now it's down to $119. The high-speed ff and rewind sounds like a jet turbine. The quality is on par with the former $1,000 price tag. It has stereo, and it comes with RCA, coax, and S-video in/out connections, plus something called IEEE 1394 connectors.
I originally bought a Mitsubishi HS-339UR videocassette player, back in June of 1986, 20 years ago, when they hadn't invented auto-tracking yet, and the machine was top quality then, and still runs after two decades and refuses to die. I've replaced one belt, and I kept the ff/rewind working with auto fan belt spray on a q-tip on the rubber wheel, using the book, "How to Keep Your VCR Alive" by Steve Thomas (bought used at amazon for $6). Video quality finally began to deteriorate very slowly with age, however, and I finally had to throw in the towel on the old Mitsubishi and get a new one. No regrets. |
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