Any DVD/VCR combo with a composite out will work great with your TWC DVR.
94.5% of television owners WITHOUT TiVo/DVR have VCR. That number drops to 60% of television owners with TiVo/DVR (but the percentage of people who use VCR when they have digital recording is much lower).
Yes. Just conect the VCR outputs (usually red and white for audio, yellow for video) to the DVR inputs. Set the DVR to record from that input, and press Play on the VCR.
A DVR recorder would be your best bet.
A digital cable dvr is different from a vcr because one takes VHS tapes, and the other records tv shows digitally to a hard drive so you can watch them later.
It should be possible to do what you want to do. Look on the rear of the DVR and see if it has RCA type connectors labeled, "out". There should be a red, white and yellow connector. The red is the right audio connector, the white is for the left audio channel and the yellow is for the compisite video out. Composite video means that all the signals necessary for something like a VCR to record from and all you need is the appropriate patch cord setup. It's "out" FROM the DVR to "IN" to your VCR. Just match the colors. Put a tape in the VCR, locate the spot on the DVR you want to transfer, then hit the RECORD button on the VCR first, THEN the play button on the DVR. Record your video and then stop the VCR's recording. Play back the VCR's recording to make sure you have the video and viola, you're done.
First off: why would you bother? The video will be inferior, and tapes are getting harder to find because the VCR is a dying technology. If your answer is "My granny has a VCR", consider buying her a DVD player - you can buy one new for $30 or less at WalMart, and get one used at a yard sale for about $10 or so.With that said, hook up the audio and video out jacks on the DVR (coded red, green and yellow) to the similar a/v in jacks on the VCR, set the VCR to record from these jacks (as opposed to recording from the tuner), press "record" on the VCR, and press "play" on the DVR.
The use tape to record and the Tape has been replaced by DVDs and Blu-ray discs. Recording TV programs on the VCR has been replaced by the DVR
Movies or streaming video use -R for storing computer data use +R
Yes it could be done just like recording from TV try it and if it doesn't work leave feed back.
No, this was a feature that came standard on all VCR's, but might suggust DVR it works far better.
if you didn't have a VCR, you wouldn't be able to watch or record VHS tapes. anything you watch on tv wouldn't be able to be recorded unless you have a DVR which is the norm today