Watching through Co-axial cable

Forum Forums Freeview HD HDR 1800T, 2000T Watching through Co-axial cable

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  • #15912
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I was trying to set up my mum’s Humax so she can watch recorded programs in the kitchen as well as the lounge, but I couldn’t find the output. I tried scanning both digital and analogue, but found nothing. What channel is the output on please?

    #53710
    Martin Liddle
    Participant

    buffster – 22 minutes ago  » 

    I was trying to set up my mum’s Humax so she can watch recorded programs in the kitchen as well as the lounge, but I couldn’t find the output. I tried scanning both digital and analogue, but found nothing. What channel is the output on please?

    There is no modulator so it isn’t possible to watch recorded programs via the aerial out socket. You could use a SCART modulator which should do the trick eg Link to eBay seller

    #53711
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Thanks for your response.

    Bit disappointing imo that I’ll have to buy something just so I can link it to another room, surely there should be a usable output from a £180 machine.

    #53712
    grahamlthompson
    Participant

    buffster – 35 seconds ago  » 

    Thanks for your response.

    Bit disappointing imo that I’ll have to buy something just so I can link it to another room, surely there should be a usable output from a £180 machine.

    RF modulators haven’t been included in any recent boxes for a long time. Even recent Sky boxes have removed the internal modulator and instead providing a socket for an optional external plug in add on device.

    A modulator provides a mono audio low quality analogue TV channel that requires a remote TV with analogue PAL tuning capability.

    No idea how long new TV’s will offer this capability now that broadcast analogue TV isn’t available in the UK (and many other European countries)

    It’s a very outdated and relatively low SD only distribution system. For a HD capable modern PVR there are much better ways of viewing content remotely. It’s OK for small screen sets in Kitchens and Bedrooms but gives very poor quality on larger screen TV’s.

    It’s part of a general reduction in old analogue technology.

    You now only get 1 analogue scart socket on most kit, not even this on Blu-ray players. Multiple scart inputs on TV’s have been replaced with HD capable HDMI, Component and VGA Analogue Inputs.

    I use such a system to feed a small screen Kitchen TV. I use one modulator to provide this feed for 4 boxes using a simple selector switch to send the appropriate signals to the modulator. That way the kitchen TV can view any of the 4 boxes independently of the main TV.

    http://www.cabling4less.co.uk/category.php?terms=HQSW-AV210&source=googleproducts&gclid=Cj0KEQjwr-KeBRCMh92Ax9rNgJ8BEiQA1OVm-N-ds74j-lp2punha21nXHzmq4ZbPw2ZISMgmnuOocIaApfR8P8HAQ

    The 4 boxes are

    Foxsat-HDR (circa 2008)

    Two HDR-Fox T2’s

    HDR 1000S

    Really good quality modulators aren’t cheap.

    http://www.tradeworks.tv/acatalog/VISION_V40-104_UHF_Modulator.html?gclid=Cj0KEQjwr-KeBRCMh92Ax9rNgJ8BEiQA1OVm-HR-ktyLMgeo_aW3ME_u6_cKV5t79MMbJBwqTfwppTsaAofd8P8HAQ

    I doubt most would want to add this sort of cost to a box for an option that they may never use.

    #53713
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I appreciate that co-ax is old fashioned and offers poorer quality but I’m sure my mum’s house isn’t alone in having it built in to pipe TV around within it. Not everyone lives in new houses with built in HDMI cabling or whatever, or can afford to have such stuff routed around by ripping up floors, ceilings, plaster etc, but an awful lot of homes do have co-ax networks already in existence, and to not offer something that make use of this is poor imo.

    By all means use a better method when the TV and Humax are in the same room, but Humax shouldn’t assume that people won’t still want to use existing cabling to watch in other rooms.

    #53714
    grahamlthompson
    Participant

    buffster – 1 minute ago  » 

    I appreciate that co-ax is old fashioned and offers poorer quality but I’m sure my mum’s house isn’t alone in having it built in to pipe TV around within it. Not everyone lives in new houses with built in HDMI cabling or whatever, or can afford to have such stuff routed around by ripping up floors, ceilings, plaster etc, but an awful lot of homes do have co-ax networks already in existence, and to not offer something that make use of this is poor imo.

    By all means use a better method when the TV and Humax are in the same room, but Humax shouldn’t assume that people won’t still want to use existing cabling to watch in other rooms.

    No other Freeview+ or Freesat+ box includes this capability. Sky have persisted until recently with the system largely because it adds the magic eye remote control extension capability. Even Sky now requires extra kit to use this capability.

    In common with other makers the inclusion of internal modulators ceased pre 2008.

    If I remember correctly the last Humax PVR to include the capability was the 9200 Freeview box.

    You are rather late to the party.

    There are loads of examples of outdated technology that are not now included on modern kit.

    See my edit re the cost of providing a quality modulator.

    #53715
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    It is the industry who have dropped it.

    Hopefully something like MoCA will be adopted by the industry?

    At one time it was slated for new freetime units but did not make it for some reason (perhaps no TV support?).

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