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#1 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 54
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Not ready to jump
Hi to everyone on this useful forum - and I hope you won't mind my asking for advice - at length!
I recently needed an aerial upgrade and havered between terrestrial and dish / Humax PVR. With only a 32" TV I wasn't sure if I'd notice the difference, and there still doesn't seem to be enough HD content yet. Plus I see from this forum that the bugs in recording aren't 100% sorted in the Humax PVR (eg when programmes run late unannounced conflicts can prevent recording). It seemed to me that my combination of Pace Twin and FVRT200 was still unbeatable - 14-day EPG, record three channels at once. Anyhow, I finally settled against Freesat. I know I'm asking the converted here, but did I make the wrong call? I see that some people here have Freesat AND Freeview (how is that managed? Separate aerial downleads?), so should I be thinking about going down that route in the near future? |
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#2 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Co. Donegal
Posts: 797
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If you're getting reliable Freeview reception, and you've already bought the kit, I suggest you stick with what you've got for the time being. Review things again in (say) a year's time. A lot is likely to happen between now and then so, if you're reasonably happy with what you've got now, it should be worth waiting. The sort things that are likely to happen are a major firmware update to HDR, competative freesat PVRs becoming available, more HD channels, and HD coming to Freeview. Freeview HD will require new kit and will depend on where you live in this timesacle, but it will happen by the completion of digital switch over.
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#3 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Redditch Worcs
Posts: 17,288
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Quote:
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I see that some people here have Freesat AND Freeview (how is that managed? Separate aerial downleads?), so should I be thinking about going down that route in the near future? |
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#4 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Hawkwell, Essex
Posts: 2,186
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.........I see that some people here have Freesat AND Freeview (how is that managed? Separate aerial downleads?), so should I be thinking about going down that route in the near future?
But then again, I am a belt & braces man ![]() ![]() ![]() Rgds. Les. |
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#5 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 1,805
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Quote:
It seemed to me that my combination of Pace Twin and FVRT200 was still unbeatable - 14-day EPG, record three channels at once.
That aside, I have Freeview x3 (Inverto, the best ) and Freesat so it really depends what you want to watch. I have 8 tuners so can record many progs at once and of course still have the briliant 14 day TV guide from 4TV but thats not the issue. If you want the HD content and more films maybe, then Freesat is for you. I got it for the True movies, Simply films and more reality TV. The HD is brilliant and the David Attenborough stuff is amazing on HD. So, it really depends on what you want from the channels I think. I have both and enjoy them equally
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#6 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: London
Posts: 271
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I added the HDR to my Pace Twin and am still using both - it allows me to set up recordings on Fiive USA from the Pace EPG and watch any channel on that when both tuners are recording on the Humax. It seems to be the ideal way to get the best of both worlds
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#7 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 54
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Thanks for all the very helpful responses.
Yes, I'm still struggling on with the Digifusion 145 (the 200 is in the loft awaiting the death of the 145 - maybe I'll be able to make one live one from two dead ones??!!) Or more likely, I'll go Humax HD when the 145 expires. ![]() Thing is, I'm hooked on the 14 day EPG. I still can't believe the other manufacturers haven't picked up on it. Maybe eventually there will be a way for boxes to download all programme info from an internet connection? What I'd REALLY like is one box, with three or four tuners, a nice big HD drive, and an integrated DVD/BD recorder. And if it could make great coffee as well....
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#8 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 69
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Is that the Digifusion you have LDW? If so I'm amazed you found one that lasted longer than 6 months!!!! I went through 4 of those, loved the box but they all overheat and are so unreliable as they crash constantly......geez, that brings back memories.
It was the RF input socket that did for it in the end, non-stop pixellation unless you could wedge the cable in just the right place. Completely stable for the last few years as well.
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#9 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Oxford
Posts: 12,689
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Really Freeview and freesat compliment each other - both have channels that are not available on the other. So for the best of UK free TV you need both.
I too have a Pace Twin and an FVRT200 both going trong with no rpoblems with either since purchase, BUT I have Sky HD and multi-satellite and not freesat (my interest in motor racing is catered for very poorly on free UK TV) |
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) and Freesat so it really depends what you want to watch. I have 8 tuners so can record many progs at once and of course still have the briliant 14 day TV guide from 4TV but thats not the issue. If you want the HD content and more films maybe, then Freesat is for you. I got it for the True movies, Simply films and more reality TV. The HD is brilliant and the David Attenborough stuff is amazing on HD. 