For three years, I’ve had this setup:
Coolsat 5000
motorized Ku dish
Invacom linear and circular Ku LNB
10 foot BUD C-band dish
13v/18v polarity switching C-band LNB
dish positioner for the BUD
Last week, I decided I wanted to upgrade to a HD FTA receiver, thinking that I could get some of the free HD broadcasts listed on Lyngsat.
Bad idea. Let me explain:
I ordered an nfusion HD receiver with a 8PSK kit. It was delivered two days ago.
The good:
It tunes and displays terrestrial ATSC local stations just fine.
It operates my USALS motorized dish just fine.
It records to a USB hard drive just fine.
It records to my computer’s hard drive via ip just fine.
Free regular DVB services scan and display just fine.
The bad:
No blindscan
The factory-loaded transponder and SR values are totally inadequate.
GoSatellite failed to send me their in-house CD, which they advertise as containing the lastest software.
“Software update via the internet” does not work.
Can’t pick up any DVB-S2 PSK services.
I’ll start at the beginning: I know I installed the 8PSK unit correctly, and I know I connected the rear cable correctly. Next, I did a factory reset. Then I set up my USALS and DiSEqC switch settings, and when went to scan a satellite, I discovered that there was no blindscan and that I would have to manually enter the transponder and SR numbers for all the services I wanted to scan in. Over the course of several hours, one by one, I tried to get each of the free DVB-S2 8PSK services that are listed on Lyngsat. This included all the services on Ku-band and all the services on C-band. I couldn’t get a single one. I did find one HD service, but it was being broadcast in regular DVB (not 8PSK). That service was a NASA channel on C-band AMC7 at 137 degrees West. It was a beautiful picture (720p)
Maybe my 8PSK unit is defective…or maybe it only works with hacked Dishnetwork HD channels. I don’t know. But at any rate, at this point in time (March 2009), there aren’t enough legitimate free HD channels to justify replacing a standard def receiver with an HD one. So, getting the nfusion HD was a bad idea. Mainly, I was wanting to get NBC’s HD channels (one for each time zone), plus any HD feeds I could find with blindscan. But of course, I discovered that the NFUSION HD HAS NO BLIND SCAN.
Most of the fault for this fiasco lies with me. I should have done more research before buying the nfusion HD. My thinking was this: “Hey, it’s been 3 years since I got the Coolsat 5000. I’ll get a top-of-the-line HD receiver, and it’s bound to have blindscan.” So when I saw that GoSatellite had rated the nfusion HD as the best HD receiver….I bit.
Just wondering…have any of you other nfusion HD owners been able to get a legitimate free high definition VBS-S2 8PSK channel?
Also, I was wondering if there might be any possibility that a future software upgrade might add blindscan capability to the nfusion HD.
David
Coolsat 5000
motorized Ku dish
Invacom linear and circular Ku LNB
10 foot BUD C-band dish
13v/18v polarity switching C-band LNB
dish positioner for the BUD
Last week, I decided I wanted to upgrade to a HD FTA receiver, thinking that I could get some of the free HD broadcasts listed on Lyngsat.
Bad idea. Let me explain:
I ordered an nfusion HD receiver with a 8PSK kit. It was delivered two days ago.
The good:
It tunes and displays terrestrial ATSC local stations just fine.
It operates my USALS motorized dish just fine.
It records to a USB hard drive just fine.
It records to my computer’s hard drive via ip just fine.
Free regular DVB services scan and display just fine.
The bad:
No blindscan
The factory-loaded transponder and SR values are totally inadequate.
GoSatellite failed to send me their in-house CD, which they advertise as containing the lastest software.
“Software update via the internet” does not work.
Can’t pick up any DVB-S2 PSK services.
I’ll start at the beginning: I know I installed the 8PSK unit correctly, and I know I connected the rear cable correctly. Next, I did a factory reset. Then I set up my USALS and DiSEqC switch settings, and when went to scan a satellite, I discovered that there was no blindscan and that I would have to manually enter the transponder and SR numbers for all the services I wanted to scan in. Over the course of several hours, one by one, I tried to get each of the free DVB-S2 8PSK services that are listed on Lyngsat. This included all the services on Ku-band and all the services on C-band. I couldn’t get a single one. I did find one HD service, but it was being broadcast in regular DVB (not 8PSK). That service was a NASA channel on C-band AMC7 at 137 degrees West. It was a beautiful picture (720p)
Maybe my 8PSK unit is defective…or maybe it only works with hacked Dishnetwork HD channels. I don’t know. But at any rate, at this point in time (March 2009), there aren’t enough legitimate free HD channels to justify replacing a standard def receiver with an HD one. So, getting the nfusion HD was a bad idea. Mainly, I was wanting to get NBC’s HD channels (one for each time zone), plus any HD feeds I could find with blindscan. But of course, I discovered that the NFUSION HD HAS NO BLIND SCAN.
Most of the fault for this fiasco lies with me. I should have done more research before buying the nfusion HD. My thinking was this: “Hey, it’s been 3 years since I got the Coolsat 5000. I’ll get a top-of-the-line HD receiver, and it’s bound to have blindscan.” So when I saw that GoSatellite had rated the nfusion HD as the best HD receiver….I bit.
Just wondering…have any of you other nfusion HD owners been able to get a legitimate free high definition VBS-S2 8PSK channel?
Also, I was wondering if there might be any possibility that a future software upgrade might add blindscan capability to the nfusion HD.
David