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AV Senders |
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#1 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Loony fae Aberdeen
Posts: 8,195
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AV Senders
OK, I am referring to the things that you plug one into the TV with the sky box, and the other into another TV in the house to receive sky in the second room. Have I called them the right thing?
A bit confused, have seen a few in Argos. Now, there is 2 reasonably priced ones, but they look a bit rubbish. It then jumps up to £80+. Why would anyone pay this? Surely it would be preferable to just pay the extra £40 for a year worth of multi-room?? Also, the £80 is the only one that specifies that it "Transmits through walls, doors and ceilings." Erm... surely it would be pointless if it didn't!!! One last question, we have sky+ downstairs and sky multi-room with the old box in the room next to mine. Which box would I be better off setting it up in, the multi-room or the Sky+? Thanks |
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#2 |
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Banned User
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 2,313
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Quote:
OK, I am referring to the things that you plug one into the TV with the sky box, and the other into another TV in the house to receive sky in the second room. Have I called them the right thing?
A bit confused, have seen a few in Argos. Now, there is 2 reasonably priced ones, but they look a bit rubbish. It then jumps up to £80+. Why would anyone pay this? Surely it would be preferable to just pay the extra £40 for a year worth of multi-room?? Also, the £80 is the only one that specifies that it "Transmits through walls, doors and ceilings." Erm... surely it would be pointless if it didn't!!! One last question, we have sky+ downstairs and sky multi-room with the old box in the room next to mine. Which box would I be better off setting it up in, the multi-room or the Sky+? Thanks An AV sender will transmit anything that can be transmitted via a scart cable (allegedly). The more expensive ones are better than the cheap ones in terms of suffering from less interference, not being disturbed by wireless routers, wireless and mobile phones, and microwave ovens, and are better at sending a signal through wall and floor materials. You would normally set up an AV sender using the Sky box which gets least usage - remember, whoever is watching the Sky box via an AV sender is watching whatever the Sky box that the AV sender is attached to is playing. Now, if the room that you are putting the AV sender in is normally used by somebody who doesn't want to watch what is on the main Sky box, then connect the AV sender to your secondary box. Alternatively, if the room is normally used by somebody who doesn't want to watch what is playing on the Sky box in the room next to yours, connect it to your main box. Another advantage of connecting it to the Sky+ box is that you can then view things from the Sky planner via the AV sender. But the reverse is also true - if somebody is watching something from the Sky+ planner, the AV sender is not going to allow you to watch live Sky. Either way, it can only be showing what is showing on one of your two Sky boxes. The distance and materials that make up walls and floors between the two AV senders may also have some impact on which Sky box you connect it to. |
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#3 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Loony fae Aberdeen
Posts: 8,195
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Yeah, but what I meant was £80 for the sender + £40 = £120 for a year multi-room. Thanks for your advice
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#4 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Dorset
Posts: 383
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Ours came from Gizoo (Serif) online this month and cost less than £20 - made in China of course like everything else.
But a one-off payment, no annual charge. Any arguments re programmes, Sky is sent to the 'spare' TV and Freeview is watched on the main set. Is that the point you are making? |
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