Forum › Forums › Freeview HD › HDR FOX T2 › Picture break-ups and periodic loss of signal with HDR Fox T2
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October 17, 2012 at 7:27 pm #13782
Anonymous
InactiveMy Humax HDR Fox T2 occasionally loses the signal for a fraction of a second or a few seconds. The signal strength is fine. An engineer has checked the aerial. I have high quality, screened aerial and HDMI leads. The break-up did not happen on my previous PVR.
October 17, 2012 at 7:46 pm #39004grahamlthompson
ParticipantThe box has very sensitive tuners, you could simply have too much signal or perhaps the channels you want have been stored in the 800’s and a weaker transmitter has been stored at the normal lcn’s. Try an attenuator if there aren’t any in the 800’s.
October 18, 2012 at 8:42 am #39005Anonymous
InactiveMy signal level has been checked by an engineer and adjusted accordingly. I have no 800s. The HDR Fox T2 just doesn’t seem fit for purpose.
October 18, 2012 at 10:01 am #39006grahamlthompson
Participantmusictechguy – 1 hour ago »
My signal level has been checked by an engineer and adjusted accordingly. I have no 800s. The HDR Fox T2 just doesn’t seem fit for purpose.
Isn’t it worth £3.00 just to find out ? Did the engineer bring a spectrum analyzer. Without one he’s not going to find out very much about your signal.
I have a HD FOX T2. no problems at all.
October 18, 2012 at 12:11 pm #39007Anonymous
Inactive> Musictechguy, same thing happens to my T2.
All my aerial set up was fully tested and new aerial and booster added last year, I was having problems so engineer spent ages doing loads of tests on it for signal strength, etc.
It does seem much more sensitive to everything than my old 9200T PVR
October 18, 2012 at 12:21 pm #39008Anonymous
InactivePaulBear – 9 minutes ago »
> Musictechguy, same thing happens to my T2.
All my aerial set up was fully tested and new aerial and booster added last year, I was having problems so engineer spent ages doing loads of tests on it for signal strength, etc.
It does seem much more sensitive to everything than my old 9200T PVR
It just seems that the Humax products are not fit for purpose. I’m directly in line to a transmitter.
October 18, 2012 at 12:42 pm #39009grahamlthompson
ParticipantPaulBear – 29 minutes ago »
> Musictechguy, same thing happens to my T2.
All my aerial set up was fully tested and new aerial and booster added last year, I was having problems so engineer spent ages doing loads of tests on it for signal strength, etc.
It does seem much more sensitive to everything than my old 9200T PVR
If you had the booster fitted pre-dso take it out of service. At DSO the transmission power goes up 10dB which will be similar to the gain the amplifier provided.
October 18, 2012 at 12:46 pm #39010grahamlthompson
Participantmusictechguy – 20 minutes ago »
PaulBear – 9 minutes ago »
> Musictechguy, same thing happens to my T2.
All my aerial set up was fully tested and new aerial and booster added last year, I was having problems so engineer spent ages doing loads of tests on it for signal strength, etc.
It does seem much more sensitive to everything than my old 9200T PVR
It just seems that the Humax products are not fit for purpose. I’m directly in line to a transmitter.
That’s exactly the source of your problem. At DSO the signal strength is increased by 10dB. If you can see the transmitter you can probably use a coathanger to view.
See Too Much Signal
http://www.aerialsandtv.com/ampsandsplitters.html#Attenuator
October 18, 2012 at 1:02 pm #39011Anonymous
Inactivegrahamlthompson – 15 minutes ago »
musictechguy – 20 minutes ago »
PaulBear – 9 minutes ago »
> Musictechguy, same thing happens to my T2.
All my aerial set up was fully tested and new aerial and booster added last year, I was having problems so engineer spent ages doing loads of tests on it for signal strength, etc.
It does seem much more sensitive to everything than my old 9200T PVR
It just seems that the Humax products are not fit for purpose. I’m directly in line to a transmitter.
That’s exactly the source of your problem. At DSO the signal strength is increased by 10dB. If you can see the transmitter you can probably use a coathanger to view.
See Too Much Signal
http://www.aerialsandtv.com/ampsandsplitters.html#Attenuator
No, as I said. An engineer has been around, reduced the strength of the reception, and ensured that it is within normal parameters The transmitter is not that close.
October 18, 2012 at 1:07 pm #39012grahamlthompson
Participantmusictechguy – 4 minutes ago »
grahamlthompson – 15 minutes ago »
musictechguy – 20 minutes ago »
PaulBear – 9 minutes ago »
> Musictechguy, same thing happens to my T2.
All my aerial set up was fully tested and new aerial and booster added last year, I was having problems so engineer spent ages doing loads of tests on it for signal strength, etc.
It does seem much more sensitive to everything than my old 9200T PVR
It just seems that the Humax products are not fit for purpose. I’m directly in line to a transmitter.
That’s exactly the source of your problem. At DSO the signal strength is increased by 10dB. If you can see the transmitter you can probably use a coathanger to view.
See Too Much Signal
http://www.aerialsandtv.com/ampsandsplitters.html#Attenuator
No, as I said. An engineer has been around, reduced the strength of the reception, and ensured that it is within normal parameters The transmitter is not that close.
How exactly did he do that without using an attenuator ?
October 21, 2012 at 2:51 am #39013Anonymous
Inactivegrahamlthompson – 2 days ago »
musictechguy – 4 minutes ago »
grahamlthompson – 15 minutes ago »
musictechguy – 20 minutes ago »
PaulBear – 9 minutes ago »
> Musictechguy, same thing happens to my T2.
All my aerial set up was fully tested and new aerial and booster added last year, I was having problems so engineer spent ages doing loads of tests on it for signal strength, etc.
It does seem much more sensitive to everything than my old 9200T PVR
It just seems that the Humax products are not fit for purpose. I’m directly in line to a transmitter.
That’s exactly the source of your problem. At DSO the signal strength is increased by 10dB. If you can see the transmitter you can probably use a coathanger to view.
See Too Much Signal
http://www.aerialsandtv.com/ampsandsplitters.html#Attenuator
No, as I said. An engineer has been around, reduced the strength of the reception, and ensured that it is within normal parameters The transmitter is not that close.
How exactly did he do that without using an attenuator ?
We have a communal aerial which worked great with my previous PVR. It had a booster on it which he turned down.
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