Is it worth it to grasp a cox dvr when i enjoy a dvd recorder?
Answers: Q: is it worth it?
A: financially, not really. morally, if you want it - why not?
Q: can i copy DVR to DVD-R?
A: Yes - select the input your cable box is connected to on the recorder and copy as you would any other recording. But, it will single record contained by real-time (1x) - so it will take as long to history as the DVR recording does to play.
Q: will within be a loss in power?
A: that depends on a few things - such as the connections being used and the broadcast trait of what was record. With a DVR, you can record HD signal if your box is HD-capable. But a DVD doesn't hold enough space on one band to hold a HD picture. So, in that casing... yes, quality would be reduced. Otherwise, no - as long as your connections are of apposite quality (s-video would probably be the great quality connections between the DVR/CB and the DVD recorder).
Q: is the standard difference noticeable between XP and LP mode.
A: it depends on your eye for such things. XP mode is the utmost quality demo on a DVD, but the difference between it and SP is almost impossible to tell. SP is unanimously the default mode. Between XP and LP you should see a difference, however. Even SP and LP, you would probably perceive a bit of a drop in trait.
Q: would TiVo be a better option than cox DVR.
A: both vitally serve the same purpose and enjoy the same functionality. You already hold the cox service, so going with the DVR would probably be the cheaper route for the same function.
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