I have been with Dish for almost 14 years. I currently have a Dish 622 DVR which I've been very pleased with. I've been engaged with Dish for so long that I don't have a lot of knowledge about DTV outside of what I've searched/read over the last couple of days. So I have some questions I need clarification on.
I would like to have 3 TV's hooked up - 1 is HD, the other 2 are SD. I don't have any specific plans to upgrade the SDTV's any time soon although one of them dying could change that, obviously.
I would be going with the Whole Home DVR solution.
1) I was going through the DTV website for new customers and looking at the receiver choices. The non-HD DVR shows "Advanced Receiver" next to it. What does that mean? It would be nice if I could get the SD DVR and have it be a part of the Whole Home DVR, but I've seen some conflicting info on whether it would work that way. The "Advanced Receiver" notation has me wondering. I understand that the main receiver would need to be the HD DVR, which I would want anyway to connect to my HDTV. I also understand I'd have to have at least one other HD receiver for some reason in order to activate the Whole Home DVR system. But I was thinking maybe I could get the HD DVR, an SD DVR and HD receiver and make it work.
2) My current 622DVR is connected to the Internet via a Wireless-G bridge. My understanding is that the ethernet port on the DTV DVR would be used to communicate with the other receivers. Is there some kind of adapter that can be installed to allow that DVR to communicate with the other receivers AND get on the Internet for VOD, etc? If so, how much extra $$$ is that?
3) I read something about the method used by the receivers to communicate. It sounds like the communication occurs via coax and a conversion happens on each end with DECA modules. Is that correct? I also read that certain receivers have no need for DECA modules. If so, on the receivers that don't require DECA modules, are the ethernet ports used for anything? The receiver networking issue has been a point of confusion for me.
4) Do the receivers use UHF remotes like the Dish receivers or is communication between the receivers 2-way so that the user can use an IR remote on a receiver and it would send the signal back to the main DVR via the network?
Is there anything else I should know in switching from Dish to DTV that might be a negative? I'm trying to get out ahead of these issues for my wife because she will definitely complain if she can't do something she's been able to do before.
Thanks for your knowledge and assistance!
I would like to have 3 TV's hooked up - 1 is HD, the other 2 are SD. I don't have any specific plans to upgrade the SDTV's any time soon although one of them dying could change that, obviously.
I would be going with the Whole Home DVR solution.
1) I was going through the DTV website for new customers and looking at the receiver choices. The non-HD DVR shows "Advanced Receiver" next to it. What does that mean? It would be nice if I could get the SD DVR and have it be a part of the Whole Home DVR, but I've seen some conflicting info on whether it would work that way. The "Advanced Receiver" notation has me wondering. I understand that the main receiver would need to be the HD DVR, which I would want anyway to connect to my HDTV. I also understand I'd have to have at least one other HD receiver for some reason in order to activate the Whole Home DVR system. But I was thinking maybe I could get the HD DVR, an SD DVR and HD receiver and make it work.
2) My current 622DVR is connected to the Internet via a Wireless-G bridge. My understanding is that the ethernet port on the DTV DVR would be used to communicate with the other receivers. Is there some kind of adapter that can be installed to allow that DVR to communicate with the other receivers AND get on the Internet for VOD, etc? If so, how much extra $$$ is that?
3) I read something about the method used by the receivers to communicate. It sounds like the communication occurs via coax and a conversion happens on each end with DECA modules. Is that correct? I also read that certain receivers have no need for DECA modules. If so, on the receivers that don't require DECA modules, are the ethernet ports used for anything? The receiver networking issue has been a point of confusion for me.
4) Do the receivers use UHF remotes like the Dish receivers or is communication between the receivers 2-way so that the user can use an IR remote on a receiver and it would send the signal back to the main DVR via the network?
Is there anything else I should know in switching from Dish to DTV that might be a negative? I'm trying to get out ahead of these issues for my wife because she will definitely complain if she can't do something she's been able to do before.
Thanks for your knowledge and assistance!