A fairly long post. Feel free to comment on or critique it.
I thought it might be useful for those looking to put together DVB card based systems to share the details of my setup and some of my initial observations of the software I've used.
I spent a couple of months trying to determine what the minimum I would need for good 422 and HD signal decoding (mainly sports feeds). My goal was to end up with a system that would be slaved to my Pansat 2500 and output via DVI @ 1080i to my Sony HDTV.
Picking the hardware was the most difficult part. Obviously one wants to spend a little as possible and still guarantee good performance. There are so many options and one could always find someone who had problems with it.
For Hardware what I ended up with was this:
DVB card : Skystar 2 (rev 2.6D)
PC : MSI Neo 4F motherboard
AMD Athlon 64 3200+
1G PC3200 CL3 ram
Gigabyte nVidia 6600GT 128M, DVI, Svideo, Component out
Selection of the DVB card was not too difficult. I was torn between the Skystar 2 (popular in Europe) and the Twinhan 102g (popular here in NA). The European in me chose the Skystar. One of my issues was availability. At the time I could find no distributor locally for DVB cards, something that has changed recently (it is fairly obvious why), so I looked for a Canadian dealer. Unfortunately what I found was that I could order one from a supplier in Germany and have it cost 25% less, including shipping/taxes, than I could get it from a distributor in Canada!? Plus they took paypal which eliminated some US suppliers, including at least one sponsor of this site - they only take paypal or credit cards from US addresses ,very narrow minded in my opinion.
In general I think choosing between the two DVB cards is really a flip of the coin although I do notice that a few people in this forum are having support issues with the Twinhan. For me I think if this card fails the cost to send it back and the time spent waiting is not worth it. I would just buy a new one and now that I can get a 102g locally I would likely just get that (although still the same price as my shipped Skystar).
The selection of the PC was a bit more worrying. One can find people claiming they get great performance from a P4 2.4 to others having problems with P4 3.2. Just as important is the graphics card so, when I found a system that met my price point, had a graphics card that was designed to drive HDTV displays, and a processor that should be more than quick enough, I finally bought my system. The worry is that you never really know if it will all work until you see your first beautiful HD feed.
Software: I have only limited experience with the various DVB packages. I haven't had much time to play as I have a 1 year old daughter who recently learned how to walk and so takes up a lot of my free time (which I'm happy to give her). I have not done much in the way of tinkering with graphs and options yet so what I report here should be taken with a grain of salt or two.
Packages that I've tried are:
DVBViewer Technisat Edition - obviously comes with the card and I used it for my initial setup just to get things working. This version does not do 422 but does do HD. Works well but has an annoying error mesage that pops up when you can't lock a signal. Looks like it's designed for those having a fixed channel list and seemed clumsy to add channels or enter a wildfeed freq and symbol rate. Perhaps if I used it more I might be able to figure it out. But with no 422 I'm not interested in pursuing it.
ProgDVB (free)- a popular program, lots of people like it and I may try and spend some more time getting used to it. I find the user interface a bit clumsy and the program seems to be unrefined (but it's free....). Sometimes video does not come up and others the user interface doesn't respond for a few seconds. Initially I tried it out on a p4 1.7 with an SD signal and when I tried to stream over the network it brought the machine to its knees. I have not yet started playing with graphs but so far I've used it to play 422 and HD smoothly.
MTheatre ($40) - I really like the user interface. Seems very easy to add new sats/transponders. Seem to be some processor usage issues though. This morning it decided peg the processor at 100% cpu when I started it up on an SD channel (BVN-TV on IA5). I'll give a few examples of processor usage below.
TSReader($99)/VLC (free) - great combination. No screwing around with graphs. This seems to be a good combination for feed viewing but not as good for regular channels you might watch (i.e. my wife may not be able to operate it). I really like VLC a lot as it is also perfect for streaming, transcoding, and viewing on other machines on our mixed network. I may even try some low bitrate streaming over the internet to my work.
I've used VLC as a local viewer for MyTheatre as well.
Here are some processor usage values I've had for different stream types on MyTheatre and TSReader/VLC. Note that I haven't played with graphs or configurations so have lots of investigation to do.
Soon I will choose between purchasing MyTheatre or TSReader. I have some playing to do yet though. I also have yet to check out Alt-DVB and RitzDVB.
TSReader/VLC: HD (sports 1080i) 30%, 422 (sports) 20%, 420 5-10% (non sport).
MyTheatre(video off)/VLC: HD not tried, 422 20%, 420 5-10%.
MyTheatre(Video on): HD 80%!!!, 422 30%, 420 10-20%
VLC playback of MyTheatre recorded HD: 30%
All viewed fullscreen. HD is wonderful.....
I have not looked at processor usage on ProgDVB. Obviously there are some configuration issues with MyTheatre I will need to sort out.
In general I'm very happy with the performance of this system.
I hope all this info is of use to someone. I've certiainly learned lots from reading the posts of others.
I thought it might be useful for those looking to put together DVB card based systems to share the details of my setup and some of my initial observations of the software I've used.
I spent a couple of months trying to determine what the minimum I would need for good 422 and HD signal decoding (mainly sports feeds). My goal was to end up with a system that would be slaved to my Pansat 2500 and output via DVI @ 1080i to my Sony HDTV.
Picking the hardware was the most difficult part. Obviously one wants to spend a little as possible and still guarantee good performance. There are so many options and one could always find someone who had problems with it.
For Hardware what I ended up with was this:
DVB card : Skystar 2 (rev 2.6D)
PC : MSI Neo 4F motherboard
AMD Athlon 64 3200+
1G PC3200 CL3 ram
Gigabyte nVidia 6600GT 128M, DVI, Svideo, Component out
Selection of the DVB card was not too difficult. I was torn between the Skystar 2 (popular in Europe) and the Twinhan 102g (popular here in NA). The European in me chose the Skystar. One of my issues was availability. At the time I could find no distributor locally for DVB cards, something that has changed recently (it is fairly obvious why), so I looked for a Canadian dealer. Unfortunately what I found was that I could order one from a supplier in Germany and have it cost 25% less, including shipping/taxes, than I could get it from a distributor in Canada!? Plus they took paypal which eliminated some US suppliers, including at least one sponsor of this site - they only take paypal or credit cards from US addresses ,very narrow minded in my opinion.
In general I think choosing between the two DVB cards is really a flip of the coin although I do notice that a few people in this forum are having support issues with the Twinhan. For me I think if this card fails the cost to send it back and the time spent waiting is not worth it. I would just buy a new one and now that I can get a 102g locally I would likely just get that (although still the same price as my shipped Skystar).
The selection of the PC was a bit more worrying. One can find people claiming they get great performance from a P4 2.4 to others having problems with P4 3.2. Just as important is the graphics card so, when I found a system that met my price point, had a graphics card that was designed to drive HDTV displays, and a processor that should be more than quick enough, I finally bought my system. The worry is that you never really know if it will all work until you see your first beautiful HD feed.
Software: I have only limited experience with the various DVB packages. I haven't had much time to play as I have a 1 year old daughter who recently learned how to walk and so takes up a lot of my free time (which I'm happy to give her). I have not done much in the way of tinkering with graphs and options yet so what I report here should be taken with a grain of salt or two.
Packages that I've tried are:
DVBViewer Technisat Edition - obviously comes with the card and I used it for my initial setup just to get things working. This version does not do 422 but does do HD. Works well but has an annoying error mesage that pops up when you can't lock a signal. Looks like it's designed for those having a fixed channel list and seemed clumsy to add channels or enter a wildfeed freq and symbol rate. Perhaps if I used it more I might be able to figure it out. But with no 422 I'm not interested in pursuing it.
ProgDVB (free)- a popular program, lots of people like it and I may try and spend some more time getting used to it. I find the user interface a bit clumsy and the program seems to be unrefined (but it's free....). Sometimes video does not come up and others the user interface doesn't respond for a few seconds. Initially I tried it out on a p4 1.7 with an SD signal and when I tried to stream over the network it brought the machine to its knees. I have not yet started playing with graphs but so far I've used it to play 422 and HD smoothly.
MTheatre ($40) - I really like the user interface. Seems very easy to add new sats/transponders. Seem to be some processor usage issues though. This morning it decided peg the processor at 100% cpu when I started it up on an SD channel (BVN-TV on IA5). I'll give a few examples of processor usage below.
TSReader($99)/VLC (free) - great combination. No screwing around with graphs. This seems to be a good combination for feed viewing but not as good for regular channels you might watch (i.e. my wife may not be able to operate it). I really like VLC a lot as it is also perfect for streaming, transcoding, and viewing on other machines on our mixed network. I may even try some low bitrate streaming over the internet to my work.
I've used VLC as a local viewer for MyTheatre as well.
Here are some processor usage values I've had for different stream types on MyTheatre and TSReader/VLC. Note that I haven't played with graphs or configurations so have lots of investigation to do.
Soon I will choose between purchasing MyTheatre or TSReader. I have some playing to do yet though. I also have yet to check out Alt-DVB and RitzDVB.
TSReader/VLC: HD (sports 1080i) 30%, 422 (sports) 20%, 420 5-10% (non sport).
MyTheatre(video off)/VLC: HD not tried, 422 20%, 420 5-10%.
MyTheatre(Video on): HD 80%!!!, 422 30%, 420 10-20%
VLC playback of MyTheatre recorded HD: 30%
All viewed fullscreen. HD is wonderful.....
I have not looked at processor usage on ProgDVB. Obviously there are some configuration issues with MyTheatre I will need to sort out.
In general I'm very happy with the performance of this system.
I hope all this info is of use to someone. I've certiainly learned lots from reading the posts of others.