Hello,
I'm using VDR from a long time with 2 DVS-S cards (one FF and one budget). Now that french TNT comes to me (and tired of waiting free TNT by sat...) I'll upgrade to TNT cards.
So I'm planning to add one WinTV-NOVA-T-500 and one WinTV-NOVA-T PCI and keep my FF DVB-S card for TV output.
I'm thinking that these 2 DVB-T cards are correctly supported. Am I wrong ?
I need another advice for antenna connection. The WinTV-NOVA-T (new model) have an antenna in AND an antenna out, so I'm thinking plug antenna in antenna in ;-) and put a cable between antenna out and the antenna in of WinTV-NOVA-T-500. Is this OK or do I really need two différents cables from the antenna with an amplifier ?
A last question, with DVB-S, I'm needing two cards if I want to see two different channels because the channels could be on differents transponders. But is it true with DVB-T ? In others words: if I want to see 3 differents channels, do I really need 3 DVB-T tuners ?
Thanks in advance.
Éric.
On Sat, 01 Mar 2008 10:49:07 +0100 Éric Laly elaly@free.fr wrote:
Hello,
Hi.
So I'm planning to add one WinTV-NOVA-T-500 and one WinTV-NOVA-T PCI and keep my FF DVB-S card for TV output.
I'm thinking that these 2 DVB-T cards are correctly supported. Am I wrong ?
They are supported, but to get stable drivers for Nova-T 500, you may need to compile them from Linuxtv.org's HG repository. Latest kernel releases may also have the necessary adjustments. See:
http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/index.php/Hauppauge_WinTV_Nova-T_500_PCI http://linuxtv.org/wiki/index.php/Hauppauge_WinTV-NOVA-T-500
I need another advice for antenna connection. The WinTV-NOVA-T (new model) have an antenna in AND an antenna out, so I'm thinking plug antenna in antenna in ;-) and put a cable between antenna out and the antenna in of WinTV-NOVA-T-500. Is this OK or do I really need two différents cables from the antenna with an amplifier ?
It depends on the signal strength and quality. Sometimes chaining doesn't work as well as external splitting with a passive T-connector. These simple solutions should be good enough for two cards. If they don't work, get a better antenna or try amplifying the signal more. If there are problems getting any reception at all, begin troubleshooting with only one of the cards physically installed on the system.
A last question, with DVB-S, I'm needing two cards if I want to see two different channels because the channels could be on differents transponders. But is it true with DVB-T ? In others words: if I want to see 3 differents channels, do I really need 3 DVB-T tuners ?
Basically the same rule applies. You'll need as many tuners as there are different transponders that you want to receive simultaneously. For example, if there are four transponders, but all the channels that you commonly watch are on two of them, you'll only need two tuners (even if you wathed 10 channels from those two transponders simultaneously).
Regards,
Niko
Niko Mikkila wrote:
A last question, with DVB-S, I'm needing two cards if I want to see two different channels because the channels could be on differents transponders. But is it true with DVB-T ? In others words: if I want to see 3 differents channels, do I really need 3 DVB-T tuners ?
Basically the same rule applies. You'll need as many tuners as there are different transponders that you want to receive simultaneously. For example, if there are four transponders, but all the channels that you commonly watch are on two of them, you'll only need two tuners (even if you wathed 10 channels from those two transponders simultaneously).
In DVB-T the 'transponders' are usually called 'bouquets', with one DVB-T card you can receive/records all channels on that bouquet.
Lauri Tischler a écrit :
Niko Mikkila wrote:
A last question, with DVB-S, I'm needing two cards if I want to see two different channels because the channels could be on differents transponders. But is it true with DVB-T ? In others words: if I want to see 3 differents channels, do I really need 3 DVB-T tuners ?
Basically the same rule applies. You'll need as many tuners as there are different transponders that you want to receive simultaneously. For example, if there are four transponders, but all the channels that you commonly watch are on two of them, you'll only need two tuners (even if you wathed 10 channels from those two transponders simultaneously).
In DVB-T the 'transponders' are usually called 'bouquets', with one DVB-T card you can receive/records all channels on that bouquet.
Thank you to you two for your informations.
Éric.