Well, that appears to be a functioning blind scan. Thanks for the testing, DVBWorld! I do like the menu structure of the receiver, it reminds me a bit of the Visionsat.
They are in China and can not see those Sats.What about testing the S2 on AMC3 or AMC21 and 4:2:2 feeds on G19?
probably not. I have plenty of receiver made in China that have blind scan listed as options (Coolsat comes to mind)
Its not a "oh we call it this you call it that" scenerio. It clearly states on the menu
AUTO SCAN which scans the existing transponders in the reciever
BLIND SCAN (Pansat calls it smart scan...fortec calls it power scan) but its the same thing. It finds the new frequencies for sports feeds, news feeds, new channels etc
What about testing the S2 on AMC3 or AMC21 and 4:2:2 feeds on G19?
He's in China. (oops, Lak7 beat me too it! )Those satellites are not. If you want S2 tests from those satellites, you'll have to capture the stream data like Pendragon did and put it on an accessible server so that it can be tested.
Iceberg
DVB World didn't say 4:2:2 stream decoding was not tried.
Ice
Hope your limited requirements are now satisfied.
not to each receiver. You must be confused with my setup. (At least I list my setup and not keep it some big secret) Heck its posted earlier in this threadBtw, you mentioned in some post having 3 or 4 recorders hooked each to a different STB.
I dont understand the above. There are plenty of folks on here with multiple receivers being used at the same time.Would you agree that this is not a mass consumer's kind of FTA setup, and usually a typical NA Sat TV watcher would probably have a single USB hard drive hooked to an STB he uses most often, and a younger person would probably be more inclined to hook a PC or network drive to the STB? That's where high bit rate recording and playback comes handy.
Again I could hide the info as a big secret like you do when its asked but since you asked I'll tell you. I have nothing to hideHow do you record the programs you like? Using Component ports of the STB and Recorder, while watching TV via HDMI OUT port of the STB? Are these analog and digital port types remain both continuously active at the same time in all your STB models?
New surprise every day. I thought, you are mostly into used car salesmen, but now such intriguing stuff is started getting revealed...I say what a hooker might say...
that makes no sense whatsoever. Regardless of satellite name you can still blind scan if the receiver supports it.
I have 3 Radio Shack Accurian models and a Polaroid. I don't think any of them are made anymore but Ebay has them. Thats where I pipcked up the 3rd Accurian model. All have 80GB drives and the Polaroid has component inputs which is pretty rare for a SD recorder.Thanks Ice! What's the model of your HD/DVD Recorder(s)?
New surprise every day. I thought, you are mostly into used car salesmen, but now such intriguing stuff is started getting revealed...
I didn't say anything about satellite name? Enter a new satellite, no transponder infomation exists, blind scan it, transponders show up in stb tps list. That is what blind scan is. Were you even directing your comments to me?
Maybe I wasn't as clear as I could have been but I don't think my post was "senseless"
tds04
I'm mostly asking for common good. My setup is old analog cable TV in the kitchen, and I'm still thinking through my first "splitter setup simplified".
My setup:
DigiMonster 33" Dish
SonicView 360 Elite
Moteck SG-2100 Motor
Invacom QPH-031 LNB
correctOr, wait a minute, haven't you shown me yours...first? Sorry what was that?
You can't test S2 that way, it's a modulation, not an encoding. You could test anything you got off of an S2 signal though, like 4:2:2 or MPEG4. But you can get those on normal DVB too.
Now that we have proven DVB-S2 blind scan, can the DVBWorld receiver be tested for recording a high bitrate (~40 megabit) feed? That would be a REAL plus (even a bigger plus than 4:2:2 IMO)... Even if no 4:2:2, this receiver paired with an AZBox sounds like a winning combination...