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Sky+ & TV link
My wife & I have the following setup. She has a Sky+ in the lounge and I
have a Sky+ in my study as a 'Multiroom' box on my wife's Sky+ subscription. We also have a portable TV in the kitchen, one in bedroom 1 and another portable in bedroom 2. I believe the TV Link device will allow us to view Sky on the 3 portables but I don't know how this will work with our 2 separate Sky+ boxes. In other words, as we each have our own box, by definition we would want to view our own choice of programs on the 3 portables. I assume I would need a TV Link for each portable? We could make do with just using 2 portables I suppose. I would be obliged if someone could walk me through the appropriate setup, snags etc. Thanks. -- Mike Gasson (from the Isle of Purbeck) |
Sky+ & TV link
on 18/11/2006, Mike Gasson supposed :
My wife & I have the following setup. She has a Sky+ in the lounge and I have a Sky+ in my study as a 'Multiroom' box on my wife's Sky+ subscription. We also have a portable TV in the kitchen, one in bedroom 1 and another portable in bedroom 2. I believe the TV Link device will allow us to view Sky on the 3 portables but I don't know how this will work with our 2 separate Sky+ boxes. In other words, as we each have our own box, by definition we would want to view our own choice of programs on the 3 portables. I assume I would need a TV Link for each portable? We could make do with just using 2 portables I suppose. I would be obliged if someone could walk me through the appropriate setup, snags etc. Thanks. You could have two TV links in each room, each separately controlling its respective box....however, you'd have to cover one up, each time you want to control the other box - you can't change the IR channel on either the box or the handset. In contrast, if you had a normal box & one sky+ everything would be fine as they're on different frequencies. |
Sky+ & TV link
In message . co.uk.com,
Jono writes on 18/11/2006, Mike Gasson supposed : My wife & I have the following setup. She has a Sky+ in the lounge and I have a Sky+ in my study as a 'Multiroom' box on my wife's Sky+ subscription. We also have a portable TV in the kitchen, one in bedroom 1 and another portable in bedroom 2. I believe the TV Link device will allow us to view Sky on the 3 portables but I don't know how this will work with our 2 separate Sky+ boxes. In other words, as we each have our own box, by definition we would want to view our own choice of programs on the 3 portables. I assume I would need a TV Link for each portable? We could make do with just using 2 portables I suppose. I would be obliged if someone could walk me through the appropriate setup, snags etc. Thanks. You could have two TV links in each room, each separately controlling its respective box....however, you'd have to cover one up, each time you want to control the other box - you can't change the IR channel on either the box or the handset. We don't want to control each others box, just our own so I assume one TV link per room (both boxes are off the same phone line)? Is each TV link matched to each box by the IR channel or is it cabled into the box? THanks. In contrast, if you had a normal box & one sky+ everything would be fine as they're on different frequencies. We do actually, but as I said, we want control of our own box (Sky+).. I know my place! Thanks -- Mike Gasson (from the Isle of Purbeck) |
Sky+ & TV link
Mike Gasson used his keyboard to write :
She has a Sky+ in the lounge and I have a Sky+ in my study as a 'Multiroom' box on my wife's Sky+ subscription. We also have a portable TV in the kitchen, one in bedroom 1 and another portable in bedroom 2. I believe the TV Link device will allow us to view Sky on the 3 portables but I don't know how this will work with our 2 separate Sky+ boxes. In other words, as we each have our own box, by definition we would want to view our own choice of programs on the 3 portables. I assume I would need a TV Link for each portable? We could make do with just using 2 portables I suppose. I would be obliged if someone could walk me through the appropriate setup, snags etc. Thanks. You could have two TV links in each room, each separately controlling its respective box....however, you'd have to cover one up, each time you want to control the other box - you can't change the IR channel on either the box or the handset. We don't want to control each others box, just our own so I assume one TV link per room (both boxes are off the same phone line)? I know. However, you both want to control your own boxes at each TV. Therefore, you will need 2 TV links by each TV. (which is why I said you'd have to cover one up) Is each TV link matched to each box by the IR channel or is it cabled into the box? Each link is cabled to the box, using the RF2 socket on the back of each box and would ALL use the same IR channel. |
Sky+ & TV link
Jono wrote:
you will need 2 TV links by each TV. Only if he has two RF cables at each TV, each going to one Sky+. This is most unlikely. He is surely just daisy-chaining the signal. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Sky+ & TV link
Jomtien presented the following explanation :
Jono wrote: you will need 2 TV links by each TV. Only if he has two RF cables at each TV, each going to one Sky+. This is most unlikely. He is surely just daisy-chaining the signal. That is what I intended to suggest when I said that each Link is cabled to the box. He states that he wants to control either box from each TV - hence the requirement of two TV links. I suppose he could use a video sender for one of the boxes & TV links for the other, although it still won't negate the need to cover one up, when not in use. |
Sky+ & TV link
In message . co.uk.com,
Jono writes Jomtien presented the following explanation : Jono wrote: you will need 2 TV links by each TV. Only if he has two RF cables at each TV, each going to one Sky+. This is most unlikely. He is surely just daisy-chaining the signal. That is what I intended to suggest when I said that each Link is cabled to the box. He states that he wants to control either box from each TV - hence the requirement of two TV links. No! This is what I said "We don't want to control each others box, just our own so I assume one TV link per room (both boxes are off the same phone line)?" I suppose he could use a video sender for one of the boxes & TV links for the other, although it still won't negate the need to cover one up, when not in use. I didn't want to fit extra cabling so I would possibly take the video sender route, but again, I'm not sure how that would work. -- Mike Gasson (from the Isle of Purbeck) |
Sky+ & TV link
Mike Gasson wrote:
"We don't want to control each others box, just our own so I assume one TV link per room (both boxes are off the same phone line)?" The problem is that you didn't explain clearly how the units are connected, or exactly what you want to do. Assuming that each remote location can only 'see' one Sky+, and that they are individually cabled back to the respective Sky+, then you just need to fit one TVLink for each TV. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Sky+ & TV link
Jono wrote:
I suppose he could use a video sender for one of the boxes & TV links for the other, although it still won't negate the need to cover one up, when not in use. Actually he wouldn't have to. This : http://www.skyeye.force9.co.uk/skyeye8.htm handles the problem very nicely. Clever bloke that Sky-Eye chap. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Sky+ & TV link
On Tue, 21 Nov 2006 08:56:12 +0100, Jomtien wrote:
Clever bloke that Sky-Eye chap. Especially if he can make a living selling units that press 'back up' every 30 seconds, when that feature is already in the digibox software.. :-) -- |
Sky+ & TV link
In message , Jomtien
writes Mike Gasson wrote: "We don't want to control each others box, just our own so I assume one TV link per room (both boxes are off the same phone line)?" The problem is that you didn't explain clearly how the units are connected, or exactly what you want to do. My apologies! My wife has a Sky+ box in the sitting room and I have another Sky+ box in my study (2 floors up), both off the same phone line. My box has a phone extension cable run up 2 stories into the study. This is a 'multiroom' setup, I pay £10 extra to use wife's viewing package. We want to be able (initially) to receive Sky programs on a kitchen TV from _her_ box. We don't want the hassle of running co-ax cable, so I assumed that a digisender unit would be needed. I was previously talking about doing the same for another TV in my bedroom, but controlled from _my_ Sky+ box, not my wife's. I could probably go without this bedroom TV but I mentioned it in case an overall setup solution could include it. Hope that makes sense? I'm not sure if the SkyEye multiSat converter will do all of the above, or is it required together with a digisender? Is it a digisender itself? All this is new to me so I am struggling here!! Thanks for help Assuming that each remote location can only 'see' one Sky+, and that they are individually cabled back to the respective Sky+, then you just need to fit one TVLink for each TV. -- Mike Gasson (from the Isle of Purbeck) |
Sky+ & TV link
Mike Gasson wrote:
I'm not sure if the SkyEye multiSat converter will do all of the above, or is it required together with a digisender? Is it a digisender itself? The SkyEye and other TVLink-type devices require a cabled RF connection. If you don't want/can't have a cable connection then you must use a wireless videosender. These require no cable and no TVLink. You can use two of these in the same house, as long as they use different wireless channels and as long as they are well-made. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Sky+ & TV link
Zero Tolerance wrote:
Clever bloke that Sky-Eye chap. Especially if he can make a living selling units that press 'back up' every 30 seconds, when that feature is already in the digibox software.. :-) Don't run him down. For many years his gadget was the only way of doing this automatically. My Tivo was red-dot free for years before the Sky firmware allowed it. Also the red-dot remover unit is just one of many devices he makes. Some are very clever indeed and without any equal, such as the one I mentioned and the Tivo version. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Sky+ & TV link
In message , Jomtien
writes Mike Gasson wrote: I'm not sure if the SkyEye multiSat converter will do all of the above, or is it required together with a digisender? Is it a digisender itself? The SkyEye and other TVLink-type devices require a cabled RF connection. If you don't want/can't have a cable connection then you must use a wireless videosender. These require no cable and no TVLink. You can use two of these in the same house, as long as they use different wireless channels and as long as they are well-made. Many thanks for that Jomtein. It looks like the digisender is what I need. Are you able to recommend a good one please? -- Mike Gasson (from the Isle of Purbeck) |
Sky+ & TV link
Mike Gasson wrote:
It looks like the digisender is what I need. Are you able to recommend a good one please? Not from where I am. AFAIK Argos do one that works well. Perhaps other readers have some suggestions? -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
Sky+ & TV link
In message , Jomtien
writes Mike Gasson wrote: It looks like the digisender is what I need. Are you able to recommend a good one please? Not from where I am. AFAIK Argos do one that works well. Perhaps other readers have some suggestions? I'd not thought of Argos! They have several, as you say. I can pick one of those. Thanks again. -- Mike Gasson (from the Isle of Purbeck) |
Sky+ & TV link
On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 08:10:19 +0100, Jomtien wrote:
Don't run him down. For many years his gadget was the only way of doing this automatically. My Tivo was red-dot free for years before the Sky firmware allowed it. Also the red-dot remover unit is just one of many devices he makes. Some are very clever indeed and without any equal, such as the one I mentioned and the Tivo version. Yes, fair enough. :-) -- |
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