|
|
STB Failure mode?
"Roger Mills" wrote in message ... In an earlier contribution to this discussion, John wrote: "Roger Mills" wrote in message ... In an earlier contribution to this discussion, John wrote: I wrote earlier about problems with Waltham and itv channels breaking up due to poor signal. If my wife gives up and turns the TV off - when we go back to it the sound has been lost on all channels. I have to unplug and retune to get any sound back. Does this indicate anything? What happens if you power down the STB and then turn it on again? 'Re-booting' it may well clear any confusion it may be suffering from. -- Cheers, Roger ______ Email address maintained for newsgroup use only, and not regularly monitored.. Messages sent to it may not be read for several weeks. PLEASE REPLY TO NEWSGROUP! I have to reload the channels - and it does overcome the problem until next time You mean you have to re-scan to find the channels, before it will do anything? If so, it's seriously in need of a one-way journey to a skip! -- Cheers, Roger ______ Email address maintained for newsgroup use only, and not regularly monitored.. Messages sent to it may not be read for several weeks. PLEASE REPLY TO NEWSGROUP! But are any new ones better able to cope with a poor signal ( possibly temporary as it was fine for about 3years) possibly caused by a tree? |
STB Failure mode?
In an earlier contribution to this discussion,
John wrote: But are any new ones better able to cope with a poor signal ( possibly temporary as it was fine for about 3years) possibly caused by a tree? Just about any! There's something wrong with this particular STB. A poor signal will always cause individual channels to break up or drop out completely - but shouldn't result in total loss of channel memory. If powering down and up doesn't fix it, bin it! Another thought . . . Does it automatically download and install firmware updates? If so, one of these could have become corrupted. I don't know how to correct that - unless there's a way of connecting it to a computer, and updating its firmware via the internet rather than via the airwaves. -- Cheers, Roger ______ Email address maintained for newsgroup use only, and not regularly monitored.. Messages sent to it may not be read for several weeks. PLEASE REPLY TO NEWSGROUP! |
STB Failure mode?
"Roger Mills" wrote in message ... In an earlier contribution to this discussion, John wrote: But are any new ones better able to cope with a poor signal ( possibly temporary as it was fine for about 3years) possibly caused by a tree? Just about any! There's something wrong with this particular STB. A poor signal will always cause individual channels to break up or drop out completely - but shouldn't result in total loss of channel memory. If powering down and up doesn't fix it, bin it! Another thought . . . Does it automatically download and install firmware updates? If so, one of these could have become corrupted. I don't know how to correct that - unless there's a way of connecting it to a computer, and updating its firmware via the internet rather than via the airwaves. -- Cheers, Roger ______ Email address maintained for newsgroup use only, and not regularly monitored.. Messages sent to it may not be read for several weeks. PLEASE REPLY TO NEWSGROUP! Spoke with a neighbour - he is experiencing poor reception on the same channels as me. However, on his TVs with built in Freeview he doesn't have a problem - only on his STB TV. All are fed from a common Distribution box. My only other Freeview is a USB stick thing on my PC - from my Dist Box. No problems. So it is beginning to look like some STBs are worse than others when the going gets tough. |
STB Failure mode?
"John" wrote in message ... -- Graham. %Profound_observation% I don't think it is "turning off the TV " that is the issue - more one of leaving the STB on a station that it cannot receive properly. Does it somehow overload or something? SNIP ... e.g. an effective memory leak, exhausting table resources, etc. and then "lock up" :) . etc. (or equivalent error or fault condition). Best wishes, News Reader Sounds likely. Not a sign of a failing STB then? SNIP Hi, I think if I were to plump for a choice I would pick poor or "cheap" programming / design. I.e. it probably or definitely (if you go for or get to industrial / aero grade specification! - lol) is possible to code and / or design for failsafe and self-error monitoring, control and management (trapping, etc.) etc. - but this can cost, and then can cost even more... So for your average £20 box... perhaps 20/30% to maybe 50% of them are probably a little tooo cheap (in design or coding)! and so will be far more prone to or inherently weak in relation to corruption, self-confusion / erroring, etc. On the other hand... it is probably a very similar scenario in which an ageing failing box will behave ... memory starting to go faulty, processor letting go occasionally, power sagging causing various outages or temporary faults, etc. Your thoughts, idea(s) or input? lol... (and most welcome!?) Best wishes, News Reader |
STB Failure mode?
SNIP ... e.g. an effective memory leak, exhausting table resources, etc. and then "lock up" :) . etc. (or equivalent error or fault condition). Best wishes, News Reader Sounds likely. Not a sign of a failing STB then? SNIP Hi, I think if I were to plump for a choice I would pick poor or "cheap" programming / design. I.e. it probably or definitely (if you go for or get to industrial / aero grade specification! - lol) is possible to code and / or design for failsafe and self-error monitoring, control and management (trapping, etc.) etc. - but this can cost, and then can cost even more... So for your average £20 box... perhaps 20/30% to maybe 50% of them are probably a little tooo cheap (in design or coding)! and so will be far more prone to or inherently weak in relation to corruption, self-confusion / erroring, etc. On the other hand... it is probably a very similar scenario in which an ageing failing box will behave ... memory starting to go faulty, processor letting go occasionally, power sagging causing various outages or temporary faults, etc. Your thoughts, idea(s) or input? lol... (and most welcome!?) Best wishes, News Reader Sounds reasonable - but to what extend is the design and manufacture of a STB shared across many name badge owners. I would expect many boxes to be made on the same conveyor. A bit like many TV sets were all built to a common chassis some years ago. With buying a PC (for example) one can see the spec (memory, processor, etc) but a STB is a bit of a mystery (or is it?) |
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:28 PM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
HomeCinemaBanter.com