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Fire TV Recast, over-the-air DVR, 1 TB, 150 hours, DVR for cord cutters

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 13,743 ratings

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4 tuners, 1 TB, 150 hours
  • Fire TV Recast is a DVR that lets you watch and record over-the-air TV at home with Fire TV or Echo Show, or on-the-go with a compatible mobile device—with no monthly fees.
  • Enjoy live sports, local news, late night shows, and other can’t miss TV from channels available through an HD antenna (sold separately).
  • Record up to 4 shows at once. Plus, store up to 150 hours of HD programming.
  • With a compatible Alexa-enabled device, use your voice to search for shows, control the channel guide, and manage recordings.
  • Enjoy your favorite entertainment anywhere—reliably stream your live and recorded shows in HD from Fire TV Recast to your compatible devices.
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Anywhere, anytime entertainment

Fire TV Recast is a DVR that lets you watch and record over-the-air TV at home or on-the-go with no monthly fees.

Watch at home with a Fire TV device or Echo Show, or take your shows with you with the Fire TV mobile app on compatible iOS and Android devices or Fire tablets.

TV with channel schedule

Make the most of free TV

Record your favorite shows and sports from channels available in your area through an HD antenna like ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, PBS, and The CW.

With 4 tuners, you can record up to 4 shows at once. Plus, store up to 150 hours of HD programming.

Home setup

HD ANTENNA

The HD antenna connects to Fire TV Recast so you can access and record free over-the-air TV. The Fire TV mobile app helps you place the HD antenna for the best possible reception.

FIRE TV, ECHO SHOW, OR MOBILE DEVICE

Fire TV Recast works best with a Fire TV device, such as a Fire TV Stick or a Fire TV Edition television. You need at least 1 Fire TV device to watch on your television. You can also watch on an Echo Show or compatible mobile device. Your Fire TV device or Echo Show will need to be on the same network as Fire TV Recast.

Home entertainment setup

Just ask Alexa

Pair Fire TV Recast with your Fire TV device or Echo Show and ask Alexa to search for shows, change over-the-air TV channels, control playback, plus browse, schedule, cancel, and delete recordings. Alexa is always getting smarter.

1: Download or open the Fire TV mobile app 2. Follow steps in app to set up Fire TV Recast 3. Watch on compatible devices.
Frequently asked questions

Which over-the-air live TV channels can I access and record via Fire TV Recast?

The channels you can access on your Fire TV Recast with a digital HD antenna will vary by your location, surroundings, distance to TV broadcast towers, terrain, and availability of local channels.

Will Fire TV Recast work with the Fire TV device I already own?

Yes – Fire TV Recast works with all generations of Fire TV streaming media players and Fire TV Edition televisions.

How many devices can I pair with Fire TV Recast?

You can pair Fire TV Recast with all of your compatible devices (such as Fire TV streaming media players, Fire TV Edition televisions, and Echo Show devices) as long as they are on the same network, and registered to the same Amazon account, as your Fire TV Recast. You can also pair with compatible mobile devices. You can watch live or recorded programs on any two of these devices simultaneously.

How many programs can I record at once?

With a 2-tuner Fire TV Recast, you can record up to 2 programs at once, and with a 4-tuner Fire TV Recast, you can record up to 4 programs at once.

Can I watch live and recorded TV, and schedule recordings when I’m not at home?

You can watch live or recorded programs, and you can record shows airing live, when you are on-the-go in the Fire TV mobile app using cellular or Wi-Fi connection.

What output resolution does Fire TV Recast support?

Fire TV Recast is capable of receiving all ATSC broadcast resolutions, including 1080i and 720p. When streaming to other devices, Fire TV Recast transcodes 1080i streams to a resolution up to 1440x720p using H.264 to ensure that all Fire TV streaming media players work with Fire TV Recast, and to deliver more reliable video streams over Wi-Fi.

What types of content can I record on my Fire TV Recast?

You can record any over-the-air live TV program that is available to you via a digital HD antenna connected to your Fire TV Recast. You cannot use Fire TV Recast to record live TV programs from any other source, such as cable or satellite boxes or streaming apps.

Where is the best place to put Fire TV Recast in my home?

Fire TV Recast is designed so that you can place it, together with the digital HD antenna connected to it, anywhere in your home (even in a different room or a different story) to optimize for antenna reception. As part of the set-up process in the Fire TV mobile app, we will tell you which direction to place your antenna to get the most channels for your location. It is recommended to place your antenna as high up as possible, against a window or outward facing wall that has a clear line of sight to your surroundings.

For more frequently asked questions, click here

Fire TV Recast technical details

Fire TV Recast technical details

Size

7.1” x 7.1” x 2.9” (180 mm x 180 mm x 73 mm)

Weight

2.4 lbs (1066 g)

Processor

Dual Core

ATSC Tuners

4 Tuners

Transcoders (for playback)

2

Storage

1 TB up to 150 hours of HDTV

Memory

2 GB

Wi-Fi Connectivity

2.4 G Wi-Fi 2x2 Wi-Fi b/g/n and 5 G Wi-Fi 2x2 Wi-Fi a/n/ac

Voice support

Fire TV Recast can be controlled using voice through supported Alexa endpoints like Echo Show, and the Alexa Voice Remote on Fire TV devices and Fire TV Edition televisions.

Ports

1 x Type A USB 3.0 (storage supported on compatible external hard drives only), TV Antenna Input, Gigabit Ethernet, Power

System requirements

Fire TV streaming media player, Fire TV Edition television, or Echo Show, and compatible mobile device.

Output resolution supported

Up to 1440x720p

Setup requirements

Fire TV mobile app (available on Amazon Appstore, Google Play Store, or iOS Appstore) on a Fire tablet (5th Gen or newer), an iOS device running iOS10 or higher, or an Android device running Android 5.0 or higher

Required for playback

Any one of the following: Fire TV, Fire TV Edition television, Echo Show, Fire tablet (5th Gen or newer), an iOS device running iOS10 or higher, an Android device running Android 5.0 or higher

Warranty and service

1-Year Limited Warranty and service included. Optional 2-Year and 3-Year Extended Warranty available for U.S. customers sold separately. Use of Fire TV is subject to the terms found here.

Regional support

Certain services may not be available outside the U.S.

Accessibility features

VoiceView screen reader enables access to the vast majority of Fire TV Recast features for users who are blind or visually impaired. Watch videos and TV shows with closed captioning displayed. Captions are not available for all content. Learn more here.

Included in the box

Fire TV Recast, 50W Power Supply, Quick Start Guide

Looking for specific info?

Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
13,743 global ratings

Customers say

Customers like the channels on the digital device. They say it gives them two lists of channels, those coming directly from the TV and those coming from other sources. They appreciate the intuitive controls and the ability to manage channels. However, some customers have reported issues with the channel guide service. Opinions are mixed on ease of setup, performance, streaming, quality, signal strength, picture quality, and recording quality.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

700 customers mention509 positive191 negative

Customers like the channels on the digital device. They mention that it gives them two lists of channels, those coming directly from TV and other sources. They appreciate the intuitive controls, and the ability to manage channels and their names. They also appreciate the rock solid reliability, and mention that the device can handle two channels at once. Customers also integrate the local channels with other services like IMDBTV, Pluto, Tubi, and others. They receive 63 channels perfectly, and Pluto channels are also included.

"...When you go to the ON NOW menu, it gives you two lists of channels, those coming directly from your antenna, and another list of those on the Recast..." Read more

"...The DVR experience is much close to what I would expect. There is a guide and a way to see what I’ve recorded...." Read more

"...It also does not require a channel guide subscription/membership as the Tivo OTA, HomeRun HD and the Tablo devices do...." Read more

"...Only, there's a problem, there is no search-for-program option. Clearly, there never has been...." Read more

2,713 customers mention1,808 positive905 negative

Customers are mixed about the performance of the digital device. Some mention that it does what it's supposed to do and does it well. Others say that there are still some considerable issues and glitches.

"...So to make a long story short, while the recast is perfectly functional right out of the box I have a lot of hope that the changes Amazon made to..." Read more

"...very good, but not as good as 1080p or 4K. For some images it is very acceptable, but for others you do notice the resolution difference from HD or..." Read more

"...The app for example needs to be more robust. And hopefully we will see these improvements in future updates...." Read more

"...Apple TV and ROKU and Tablo do cost a bit more but I am very satisfied with the results -- especially with my 4K TV! Just my opinion...." Read more

2,072 customers mention1,418 positive654 negative

Customers are mixed about the ease of setup. Some mention that it's easy to set up using the Fire TV app, while others say that it is not very easy to use. They also mention that the process was a bit painful and that there are kludges with the user interface.

"...Perfect. Setup was as easy as everyone has said...." Read more

"...Its very simple to setup -- connect your antenna to the box & using the Fire TV app on your phone, connect the box to your home wi-fi network, scan..." Read more

"...It was notoriously unreliable and not very easy to use by my girlfriend or the kids...." Read more

"...It was exceedingly easy to install and setup. I just installed a splitter at one of our TVs and ran an antenna lead into the Recast...." Read more

1,218 customers mention417 positive801 negative

Customers are mixed about the quality of the digital device. Some mention that the tuners must be of very good quality, and it's very watchable. The sound is good enough, and the build quality seems pretty solid. However, others say that it needs to reduce the quality, is partially defective, and has no adjustment for recording quality.

"...quickly that TV over the Internet had some other issues such as buffering and sometime a channel being “down for maintenance”, whatever that means...." Read more

"...Streaming is extremely reliable and I've had zero buffering even when both kids are home and making heavy use of the network...." Read more

"...When we watch the recording, it is horrible, as if the antenna is barely able to get enough signal (and most of the time it isn't)...." Read more

"...Both the fan and HDD can be heard (albeit faintly), I need to put the unit in my bedroom as that side of the house has the best OTA reception...." Read more

1,214 customers mention478 positive736 negative

Customers are mixed about the recording quality of the digital device. Some mention that it's easy to record programs and manage the recordings, while others say that it loses all recording, or has issues playing back a recording.

"...Playback of recordings involved buffering from time to time as well...." Read more

"...Update***The playback scenario has much improved...." Read more

"...It only records from the antenna but I quickly realized that 95 percent of what I was recording was available by antenna! Perfect...." Read more

"...Recording options are pretty good, but would like to be able to set a "preferred" channel as well as preferred resolution...." Read more

1,134 customers mention349 positive785 negative

Customers are mixed about the signal strength of the digital device. Some mention that it has great wireless connectivity between both the Recast and Firesticks around the house, and reception on most channels is acceptable. However, many channels have trouble. The ability to transmit to various TVs wirelessly while maintaining the Recaster next to the router is the biggest selling point to this device. However some customers say that it constantly loses its internet connection and has a history of signal problems.

"...It constantly loses its internet connection, so it appears that it's recording, but the recordings are all blank...." Read more

"...It is true that you can only access 2 tuners worth TV at a time. This pretty clear in the Q&A for Recast...." Read more

"...the wrong place for our antenna for good reception, while the 2.1 signal is great...." Read more

"...all of my issues in the future... but currently its "weak or no signal" message issue, clunky menu interface, reversed series playback, two-stream..." Read more

813 customers mention455 positive358 negative

Customers are mixed about the picture quality of the digital device. Some mention that the picture is plenty good for old shows and more than adequate for viewing, while others say that the quality will suffer, HD video downgrades to a very pixelated image, and distortion will occur.

"...Also, the picture quality is really very, very good and if I hadn't read about the resolution limit I wouldn't have known to look for it...." Read more

"...Not to mention unsightly. The kitchen TV could pull in them all but the TV in the office was missing NBC, which is a must for me...." Read more

"...network channels and was again happily surprised by the quality of the visual streams I was seeing...." Read more

"...The picture looks good...." Read more

662 customers mention321 positive341 negative

Customers are mixed about the streaming. Some mention that it's smooth and fast, with good rewind and fast-forward options. They also say that scanning channels was quick. However, some customers have reported issues with pixel issues, buffering lag, and slow response times for rewounding and fast forwarding.

"...They advertise that this box has the most reliable streaming over Wi-Fi of any OTA dvr and I'm convinced that this claim is entirely valid...." Read more

"...'s no "instant replay" (usually a preset 10-20 second jump back), no slow-mo...." Read more

"...Sixth, playback: The quality of the stream was good...." Read more

"...That’s frustrating.DVR inteface responsiveness is not nearly as quick as Windows Media Center...." Read more

Save Your Money and Buy a TiVo - 2 Years of Frustration, No Improvements
1 Star
Save Your Money and Buy a TiVo - 2 Years of Frustration, No Improvements
***NOVEMBER 2020*** I've come to the conclusion that this is just a piece of junk that Amazon has no interest in trying to improve. It constantly loses its internet connection, so it appears that it's recording, but the recordings are all blank. Amazon hasn't made any improvements to make this more user friendly. Trying to reconnect to the internet once the connection is lost it is a joke. I'm so sorry I ever wasted my money on this junk. I wish they'd release the TiVo app they promised 2 yrs ago so I could throw this in the trash once and for all***AUGUST 2019 UPDATE** Its been 9 months since it was released and Amazon just doesn't seem interested in improving its Fire Recast device. Its no better and in many ways, is actually worse than it was when I first bought it. Because Amazon has no desire to listen to its some of their earliest buyers of its device, I'm forced to remove yet another star from my review. While the device may be "good enough" to satisfy cord cutters who watch & record OTA TV at a bare minimum, I definitely can't recommend it for frequent recordings or playback. For that, TiVo is still the best personal DVR around and and they keep making improvements for a better device. For example, just deleting a show on the Recast is a major pain -- most DVRs (including Cloud DVRs included with many streaming subscriptions) you can immediately delete the program you just watched without having to end the playback, but with the Recast, you have to actually exit the program and return to the menu, press the options button, select Delete, confirm delete and then wait for what seems like forever for the show to delete -- and thats IF it deletes. When I'm watching back several episodes, after the 3rd or 4th deletion, the Recast hangs up. I then have to unplug the device and wait for it to start up before trying to delete the show again. Most of the same things I complained about 6 months ago are still problematic today -- Recorded shows from the same series still display in reverse order so you have to scroll all the way to the end in order to start playback with the earliest episode recorded, they still haven't figured out how to display the entire contents of a show's description or how to view info about the show you're watching while you're watching it (again, most DVRs care capable of this) -- Like I said it just doesn't seem like Amazon has any interest in improving its Fire Recast device its pretty much an "As Is" device meaning, what you get now is what you'll have next year.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------**NOV 2018** When I cut the cord a few years ago, one of the first things I bought was a TiVo. I wish it didn't require a monthly subscription, but I'm willing to pay it because I love everything my TiVo can do. When I saw Amazon's Fire Recast, I was intrigued but not seriously considering it - if I were going to spend more than $250 for a new DVR, I'd buy the latest Roamio OTA which doesn't require a monthly subscription. On Black Friday, the Recast was on sale AND Amazon gave me the opportunity to buy it in 5 monthly installment payments so I took advantage of the offer & pulled the trigger. I've had the Recast for about a week now and here are my thoughts.Its very simple to setup -- connect your antenna to the box & using the Fire TV app on your phone, connect the box to your home wi-fi network, scan for OTA channels & after a few minutes, you're ready to go. Because the Recast doesn't need to be connected to your TV, you can place the box wherever you get the best antenna reception even if thats in another room or on another floor. The Recast works seamlessly with an existing Fire device such as the Fire Box, Fire Cube, Fire Stick or Fire Tablet. It just becomes another line item on your Home screen & there's a new menu option called DVR. There's a channel guide (accessible on your TV only) w/2 weeks worth of programming so you can set your DVR in advance. You can access your OTA channels' live broadcasts or your DVR recordings on any TV connected to a Fire device & logged into your Amazon account. The picture looks good. I don't think its as crisp & clean as the TiVor or when the antenna is connected directly to your TV, but it might be my antenna or the placement of it, so I'm not ready to fault the Recast just yet.Here's where I think the Recast needs to improve:1. There needs to be a way to monitor the DVR's space. I bought the larger Recast which has 1 TB of space or approx 150 hrs of HD recording. Since not every recording is in HD, its impossible to guess how much space you've used. No where does it tell you how much space you've used up or how much you have left.2. Playback needs to be a little more simplified & controlled. You can play, pause, rewind & fast forward, but you can't restart. There's no "instant replay" (usually a preset 10-20 second jump back), no slow-mo. There's no way to get programming info while you're watching the recording.3. When you record multiple episodes of the same series & then want to watch them back it defaults to the most recently recorded episode rather than the oldest. Most people prefer watching TV episodes in the order that they aired so they need to be listed in reverse order (oldest to newest) to solve this problem.4. There's no autoplay. When one episode ends, the screen just pauses & waits for you to make a menu option. It WILL start playing the next episode IF you hit the FF 10 second button on your remote which means autoplay is possible.5. Season/Episode numbers need to be included in the Guide. They appear in the descriptions of your recorded shows, but not when you're scrolling through your program guide. This is pretty basic information thats included in onscreen guides of most live TV apps like TiVo, PS Vue, DirectTV Now. The info that the Recast provides is pretty minimal.6. You're not prompted to save or delete when a recording ends & once you delete a recording thats it - its gone. TiVo sends deleted programs to a Recently Deleted folder so it can be retrieved if it was accidently deleted (or you change your mind), while most of the Cloud DVRs used on live TV apps prompt you with an "are you sure" message when deleting a program from your DVR. At the very least, deleting a recording should be a 2-step process to prevent mistakes from happening, with a prompt asking if you're sure you wanna delete & informing you its gone forever if you say yes.7. While you can watch live TV & recorded programs on your mobile device, you don't have as much access as you do on your TV. For starters, there's no guide. As you scroll through your OTA channels, you see whats currently on. You also have access to your recordings, but they're all listed individually in the order they were recorded. In other words, series recordings aren't grouped together so you'll have to skip around and scroll if you want to watch several episodes of a particular series recording.My biggest complaint about devices like the Recast is that you still need internet to watch TV. Part of the appeal of cutting the cord for me was the freedom of watching TV for free without having to rely on anything or anyone else. If the internet goes down, I can still watch & record live TV. I can watch all the movies I've recorded. I can binge watch my fav shows. Thats not possible with the Recast. If the internet goes down, you have to disconnect the antenna & connect it to the TV before you can watch & if your Recast is in another room, you're out of luck. Then again, what I do like about the Recast is that unlike TiVo, I can watch live TV & my recordings on any of my TVs (as long as I have a Fire device connected to it) or my phone or tablet. While you can do this with TiVo, you need another device like TiVo stream or a SlingBox for it to work. Its almost as if Amazon can't decide if they want this to be considered an internet streaming device or an OTA DVR. For example, there aren't any channel numbers, but cord cutters and people who watch TV using an antenna and no internet know channel numbers are important. The Recast relies on the network names for identification which is more like live TV apps like Sling, PS Vue or Direct TV Now where channel numbers aren't necessary.While I don't think the Recast is too complicated or difficult to use, its not the most user friendly & its interface needs lots of improvements to even consider competing with TiVo. Still I don't regret buying it, but its not something I'd lay down close to $300 for all at once. It needs to work like a nearly $300 device & it just doesn't yet. Like my title says, its a good start but its no where near ready to seriously compete with TiVo. I give it 3.5 stars, but obviously half stars aren't an option so its rounded up to 4!------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------**UPDATED REVIEW** 3+ months laterSo I've been using the Recast for a little more than 3 months now & while there have been some improvements, there are still some considerable issues & glitches which have caused me to lower my initial rating of 4 stars to 3.1. One of the things I originally mentioned was no way to monitor available space. This has been corrected & you can now view how much disc space remains on your Recast device. This is helpful, but what isn't helpful is that it's just a broad overview. It doesn't show how much disc space individual recordings use or how much space is bring taken up by a series recording. I realize every recording is different -- a 1 hr series recording broadcast in HD will take up more space than a 1 hr series recording in SD -- but they should break it down by recordings, displaying just how much space each of your recordings uses up.2. Another issue was auto-play. This is still a big hit or miss. I have several series programmed to record & multiple episodes of those series saved. When I watch the playback of those recordings, sometimes the playback flows immediately from the end of one episode to the beginning of the next but sometimes the screen just pauses & there's nothing but a freezeframe on my screen, which means I need to hit the back button & find the next episode I want to watch or delete the episode that just ended (but that involves even more menu manipulation which I'll get to in a minute). There's no rhyme or reason why sometimes this works & sometimes it doesn't. It makes no sense. At the very least, they should add a setting to the Recast options whether or not you want auto play enabled or disabled so that its at least consistent.3. A new problem I've discovered is the unwanted deletion of programs. There's a setting in the options where you choose he max number of shows to save to the DVR. There are 3 options -- 10, 15 or 20 and you MUST select one. Its unclear what this even means. Its obviously more than 20 episodes overall, so it must be 20 episodes per series. As I mentioned above, I have several series programmed to record. One of those series recordings has saved every ep thats aired so far & there are currently more than 30 eps of that program saved. Another series recording only saved 20 eps & once it got to the 21st, it automatically deleted the 1st ep I had recorded. Because I didn't notice this until the 23rd ep was scheduled to record, I lost eps 1 a& 2 of a series I was trying to save in its entirety. This was rather infuriating, especially considring the DVR settings for both programs are identical, but I went in & changed the protection setting for the 2nd series, which will hopefully work & allow every ep to be saved. It makes no sense why one series recording has saved more than 30 eps while another will only keep 20 & appears to be just another frustrating glitch.4. When viewing a program's description, its cut off & there's no way to fully view it. You can see this in the photo I've attached. There are 3 dots indicating that the text continues on, but there's no way to view the rest of it. When you select the episode from the row on the bottom, it just starts playing the episode. You're also unable to view program details when watching a recording other than the name of the series/episode & the date it was recorded.5. The Recast is advertised as having 4 tuners, but other than for recording purposes, there's no way to take advantage of the four separate tuners. Although I can program the DVR to record 4 programs simultaneously, I can't watch 4 programs (or 2 or 3) & move back & forth between them. If there's a way do this, its not obvious. There's no 'Swap' option or 'Last Channel'. I've tested this out multiple times, bouncing back & forth between 2 programs airing at the same time on different networks. As soon as I change the channel, I lose the ability to rewind or restart the second program. What good is having multiple tuners if you can't take advantage of it by watching more than one program at the same time?6. When a program ends, it would be nice to be prompted whether or not you should delete or save the recording. Instead, the picture just pauses & you have to actually back out of the recording & hit the options button in order to select delete this recording (and thats only if the auto play feature doesn't kick in). The user interface is still pretty clunky & not really practical. It involves a lot of clicking around, hitting the back button just do the simplest of DVR commands. The Options command is pretty limited (see photo shared), like why does it say 'Earliest Available' when watching a recording instead of something more common like Restart or Play from Beginning? 'Earliest Available' makes sense when watching live TV, but not a recording. It just shows that it's still pretty unclear whether the Recast's main purpose is supposed to be as a DVR or if its supposed to be an improved way to watch live TV. The lack of a Save or Delete in the Options menu is a pretty good indication of the improvements that are still needed & that there's still a long way to go before the Recast is even considered a close competitor of the TiVo.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2018
Configuration: 4 tuners, 1 TB, 150 hoursVerified Purchase
I pre ordered this a couple weeks before the release and it arrived the day of the release. Points there for reliable shipment, for the option to make payments, and for crediting early buyers when they put it on sale.

Having read through the other reviews allow me to clarify a few things that other reviewers are having issues with. First off this is really a top notch product that works well right out of the box. In sure there is a built in preamp for the tuners and it's obviously of extremely high quality. I'm picking up all of the channels that my old hdhomerun could get plus wpxi out of Pittsburg, which is over 70 miles away. Mote importantly to me, many of the channels I am getting are just plain more reliable with this box than any other setup that I've tried. Streaming is extremely reliable and I've had zero buffering even when both kids are home and making heavy use of the network.

Let's talk interface for a minute. One reviewer mentioned that adding a channel to favorites did nothing except add a star next to it. This is not true. Any channels that you have favorited show up in their own section at the top of the channel guide. I'm currently using this to filter things out a bit as I have multiple options for CBS, NBC, ABC etc and added the one with the most reliable signal for each network to my favorites.

A couple other reviewers said that when you set a timer to record a series it will record all of the old episodes and doesn't have an option to record only the new episodes. This is also not exactly true, although the interface could use a little work here. When you select a show to record it will pop up a dialog asking if you want to record this episode or the entire series. It's true that it will by default record all episodes including any old ones in syndication. However, if you click the hamburger button again it pulls up the recording options screen where you can set it to record only new episodes, along with other options such a setting a buffer time before and after the recording in case the program begins early or ends late. This screen can also be found in the dvr tan under recording options.

What I would like to see, however, is a way to set the options I mentioned above globally. If that functionality is there I haven't found it yet. Instead I have had to go in and set options for every series I set to record, which is a little annoying.

Many people have mentioned that they are disappointed that playback is limited to 720p. I'm a little bit disappointed on this point as well, especially since there it's literally nothing in the product description mentioning this limitation. I considered taking off a star just for this. However, I'm convinced that this was a conscious design choiceby Amazon. They advertise that this box has the most reliable streaming over Wi-Fi of any OTA dvr and I'm convinced that this claim is entirely valid. My old setup used an hdhomerun tuner connected in the attic via a powerline adaptor, mythtv on my computer and kodi as a front-end. It was notoriously unreliable and not very easy to use by my girlfriend or the kids. 1080p channels would quickly saturate the network and as soon as a second recording tried to start it would fail. Playback of recordings involved buffering from time to time as well. In comparison this box has been 100% reliable in both recording and playback so far. So I understand the design choices Amazon made and tend to agree with them. Also, the picture quality is really very, very good and if I hadn't read about the resolution limit I wouldn't have known to look for it.

Continuing with the interface now. This is really very well integrated with the fire tv interface. I like that there isn't a separate apo to open. I have Pluto TV and a few of those channels now show up with my OTA channels now, too (pretty much all of the news channels). I would love it if the rest would be available here as well. My understanding is that PS Vue integrates here as well which I'm sure it's nice forthose using that service. Myself, I'm using Philo and still have to open the Philo app to access my cable channels. I'm hoping that they will get on the bandwagon here. I actually switched from Android TV to the fire sticks because of Philo, and was hesitant to do so because Android's live channels app was at that time something that I loved but that Amazon had no answer for. Well, if they can get a few more of the streaming services to integrate here it will be what the Live Channels app on Android TV promised but never delivered. So to make a long story short, while the recast is perfectly functional right out of the box I have a lot of hope that the changes Amazon made to accommodate it can open up an even more seamless experience in the future.

I think that a lot of the other reviewers were being unfair to this box. It's actually quite excellent and I've never seen a better rollout of a completely new electronics platform. The negatives that several people mentioned are in some cases things they could have solved by clicking around with their remote for a few seconds more. Amazon could polish the interface a little more, and I'm sure they will, but it's already usable now if you spend a minute to figure things out.

In short I highly recommend the Recast. It solved all of the problems I had with ota tv in our house.

Edit: a recent update added some functionality that I had been missing. When you choose to record a series it now asks if you want to record on that specific channel or on any available channel. This is important and I wish that it had been integrated right from the beginning.

To illustrate the importance of this feature, my attic mounted antenna picks up three different NBC affiliates. The strongest one is out of Youngstown, while I also pick up a weaker signal from Cleveland (the antenna is pointed at Youngstown) and a third, very unreliable channel out of Steubenville. I've had plump out a very small number of recordings ever fail, but when they did it was because the box tried to record one odd the weaker stations. This new setting prevents that happening.

My only wish now is that the new setting would integrate with the recording options menu. As of right now it is only available in a pop up right after you select a series to record. As such I went in and deleted all of my scheduled recordings and then re-entered them to make sure that the box knows my preference for which station to use, which was a fairly tedious process.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2018
Configuration: 4 tuners, 1 TB, 150 hoursVerified Purchase
First: I am always impressed with Amazon's product packaging. They make the most beautiful boxes. This product shipped via UPS and was delivered when promised and in good condition.

Second, setup: in my case probably most especially, it was too easy. I had a brief dalliance with a simple.tv OTR recording device that did not end well, so I already had a power outlet and antennas (two, with a coupler) in place; installing this device was a simple swap out of the base unit and power supply. I had planned to do a wired ethernet connection from this unit to my router in hopes that it might head off any potential performance obstacles but realized that I had no ports open, so wireless it would be

Third, soft setup: I installed the Fire TV app on my Fire Tablet and practically followed my nose. Just a touch of silliness, but no show-stopping surprises. Actually, there was a rather nice surprise: I found all of my local major network channels (and I'll count PBS as one for purposes of this review) and a number of other channels that I had no idea would be available over-the-air, for a total of 30. I never saw most of those channels with the simple.tv unit.

Fourth, live tv: I'll be honest, I very seldom watch live tv. On mornings when it snows to check traffic and road conditions, honestly, that pretty much all. But I checked the local major network channels and was again happily surprised by the quality of the visual streams I was seeing.

To be clear, if the review were to end here, it would be six out of five stars.

Fifth: recording a show. I went all through my Fire TV app to find how to schedule a recording. No dice. You cannot schedule a recording with the Fire TV app.

Dear Amazon, this is a gaping oversight and seriously needs to be a priority. I do not schedule tv shows in a vacuum; with my existing cable dvr, when I am scheduling shows, it is invariably while I am also watching tv shows. To be forced to do one *or* the other at a time is a not-minor ding.

This was however easy enough to look up and Amazon's Recast TV Q&A page is quite inclusive. First, I used the tv listings on my Fire TV to schedule a 5 pm local newscast. (It was 4:45 at the time.) Then I resumed watching a show on the CBS All-Access app on my Fire TV.

As an aside, it should be perfectly obvious at this point that I live comfortably in an all-Amazon universe. (I do have and happily use many Apple devices including the MacBook Pro that I am using to write this review and an Apple TV, and I do have and use a Roku. I like them all a lot but prefer Amazon and the Fire TV world for entertainment purposes.) I'm comfortable with that. The hits always outweigh the misses. (Glad I never bought the Fire Phone.) So I went into this purchase with high hopes and I am grading this product on that scale.

I also asked Alexa (my living room Echo Show) to record "Live with Kelly and Ryan." That just worked. (I had already changed the default settings for the Recast to record only new shows, and that was a little-bit klunky...) I was able to view my new, upcoming recordings and series on my Fire TV (again though, not while I was watching something else...).

Sixth, playback: The quality of the stream was good. The sound was not pumping through all of my speakers, but I cannot yet confirm that that was because of the Recast or because it was the evening news; I'm inclined to think the latter. I'll update as this becomes more clear. That said, the vanilla stereo I got was very good for, again, the evening news.
Navigating was the next test, and there again was a bit of a letdown. The fast-forward button on the Amazon Fire TV remote while playing back a recorded Recast video skips ahead 30 seconds. This will take some practice on my part to get used to. I prefer how my cable-company-supplied dvr works: I click fast forward and I see the stream zoom forward really fast until I see my show come back from commercials and click play...

Dear Amazon again, if you can make *that* happen, you can kill cable tv. Just sayin'. If you can do *that*, you can own the world. I know you'll catch up on the resolutions and sound mixers and stuff, but if you can do *this thing*, you win. Forever and ever. I know this is a big, fat ask... I know what makes this difficult, but this is the holy grail...

Final First Impression Score: Four Stars. So far, I'm pleased. Quite pleased. Happy, even. Am I delighted and subscribing to a sling-or-fubo-like internet tv service and phoning my cable company to strip my service with them down to Internet-only? Not quite there yet... But so close, but not...

***Update***
The playback scenario has much improved. On the advice of a commenter, I found that holding the fast-forward button shows the playback progressing forward in a smallish window along the progress bar at the bottom of the screen. As I mentioned, it's smallish, so I'm not overjoyed, but I am certainly more comfortable navigating through commercials this way.

It's a little early to call on the whole sound system thing based upon what I've been watching so far, but the sound is good enough that I feel comfortable moving more of my scheduled recordings from the cable dvr to the Recast.

I'll update further when I watch a recording of something with a little more audio heft...

PS, Dear Amazon, the whole setting-up recordings thing is still an important issue...

***Next Update***
Okay, I am now comfortable with the sound. It turns out that HD broadcasts have the whole multi-channel audio thing figured out and it works.

That the plus. Now the minus. I was listening to NPR this morning and they were touting a documentary that is scheduled to air tomorrow night on a local PBS channel that I am very interested in watching. (To anyone who might have read that sentence and found me particularly... something... I understand. And I do apologize.) For the record, it is a documentary about the southern city that I willingly chose as a home and how it has grown over many decades, truly heartstring stuff.

I set out to record this show on my Recast and ran into a few really annoying things. Things that pile on to the already annoying things about setting up Recast recordings.

Okay, I already knew the title of the show I wished to find. Only, there's a problem, there is no search-for-program option. Clearly, there never has been. So I scan my channels and scroll to the time-slot that I know the program is scheduled to air. I scroll down through all of my local channels looking for the show.

Repeatedly.
Nothing.

I accept the possibility that I might not have that (very local) channel available. I rescan for channels. I find I have two more channels than I did before. Lather, rinse, repeat, I still can't find that show.

I look closer at what I'm seeing. The channels that I can identify as local PBS channels are only by the *incredibly tiny* icons on the channel listings. No call letters, just itty-bitty, puny icons. Looking at other channels, I see the same thing. And the broader texts on the screen showing me show information offer no clues as to their source, e.g., the actual channel name or call letters.

Dear Amazon once more, you have a device that can topple the cable companies on your hands, but glaring flaws stand in your way. You *have* to improve your recording setup routines and a few user-experience gaffs.
I don't want to guess what channel I am looking at by microscopic icons. Show me, with crystal clarity, that I am looking at WTVI (for example). (Yes, for me, that local channel with that show, in this case.)

And you *must* allow for *many* recording setup options in your FireTV app. Period. I heard about this impending show during my commute to work in the morning. What a treat it would have been if I could have logged in to my Amazon account and set up that recording straightaway, by searching for the program name, right there in my browser. Or on my fire tablet. Or, practically anything other than being forced to wait until I got home, forced to use my FireTV exclusively and even then failing miserably to accomplish my wishes.

PS, I was able to search for the program, by name, on my cable box and schedule it to record. *That* process was a bit painful, but it was utterly successful.

***Yet Another Update***

Trust has been established. This is the one that makes me dearly wish there was a possible half-star rating increment. I canceled the scheduled recordings of several of my cable dvr programs that I can now record over the air with the recast. I have viewed enough recordings on the recast to know that it is at least as reliable as my cable box. I am happy with that.

Again, this would be a four-and-a-half star review if that were possible. The final half star comes with my usual, repeated gripe.

This device has been out for a while now. I'm certain that there are many talented programmers employed by Amazon who are responsible for creating and maintaining it's various software. The gaping hole remains: Users need alternative methods, aside from the recast itself, to schedule programming. I don't care what form that would take -- the Alexa app, the Fire TV app, a specialized website, smoke signals, whatever -- I just know that this product needs this. Scheduling program recordings for the Recast is still its last and most glaring weakness. I can tolerate the puny scrolling fast-forward preview screenlet. But if I want to record a show or series, I want to be able to do that at any time from anywhere and this is non-negotiable. I promise, Dear Amazon, this is what you are missing and this is what will allow you to take over the OTA HD DVR recording world.

That redundant rant aside, I do still love this product. If you have read this far, first, I'm sorry, and second, if you understand and can live with the desperately missing functionality that I have been screaming about, buy this.
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