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9200T going for landfill
"Max Demian" wrote:
"Graham" wrote in message ... "Max Demian" wrote: "Bill" wrote in message ... In message , Robin writes Bill wrote: Right, that's it, my 9200 is going for landfill. I do hope you are joking about the landfill. There's lots of old [1] folks who need to replace their VCRs. My limited experience is that the PVR9200T fits their needs nicely. I'd take it off you in a flash if you were within a shout of London as I have a queue of old[1] acquaintances. [1] old is of course a moving target = my age + ~20 Only semi joking Robin, It has given me years of good service, hard drive replaced a year ago but otherwise OK. It then started to suffer from some very strange problem where it would record one program but call it something else, sometimes with odd non UK characters in the text. Plus it would have the wrong synopsis for what it had recorded, most weird. Have you tried reformatting the HD for this? When my HD failed while looked for an alternative I put in a smaller disk. This seemed to accentuate filesystem issues, etc. Then after putting on a much much larger disk the problems magically went away. I've not reformatted for over a year. All I get now is the slow down and scheduled recordings tend to disappear after a while. I would say that keeping. The used space below 50% helps keep my Hummy happy. Maybe you fitted the wrong kind of HD. The Humax is rather fussy. The disk I replaced it with was from same family of disks as the disks fitted by Humax. Seagate streaming media or something if I recall. Even the original 160Gb disk showed filesystem issues when more than half was in use. Graham |
9200T going for landfill
In message , Graham
writes The disk I replaced it with was from same family of disks as the disks fitted by Humax. Seagate streaming media or something if I recall. Even the original 160Gb disk showed filesystem issues when more than half was in use. Graham Can anyone recommend a replacement HD? -- Bill |
9200T going for landfill
In message , Bill
writes In message , Graham writes The disk I replaced it with was from same family of disks as the disks fitted by Humax. Seagate streaming media or something if I recall. Even the original 160Gb disk showed filesystem issues when more than half was in use. Graham Can anyone recommend a replacement HD? http://www.humaxdirect.co.uk/product...102&cat=access -- Ian |
9200T going for landfill
"Ian" wrote in message
... In message , Bill writes In message , Graham writes The disk I replaced it with was from same family of disks as the disks fitted by Humax. Seagate streaming media or something if I recall. Even the original 160Gb disk showed filesystem issues when more than half was in use. Graham Can anyone recommend a replacement HD? http://www.humaxdirect.co.uk/product...102&cat=access I don't think that's in stock. See this thread on Digital Spy for ideas: http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/forums/s....php?t=1247901 -- Max Demian |
9200T going for landfill
On Tue, 20 Apr 2010 18:41:58 +0100, Alan
wrote: In message , Albert Ross wrote The Topfield is not supported by the manufacturer with regards software/firmware. Their last effort at Freeview+ is over a year old, it's as buggy as hell and not a single bug fix in site. Damn, I haven't been keeping up. The original 5800 was quite usable out of the box and I only updated the firmware a couple of times. And possibly one of those updates had very little to do with Topfield. The ''Split NIT' bug was fixed by a customer and not Topfield. I can't remember the story now but one of the programmers either moved from Topfield to Humax or vice versa. Possibly he was the only person in the world who (almost) knew how to program the chip. If we knew where he works now we may be on to something |
9200T going for landfill
In article , Bill
writes Can anyone recommend a replacement HD? Look for a CE (consumer electronics) hard drive. I've seen Seagate/Maxtor and WD branded ones. Try and find one with the same or lower current draw on the 5v and 12v lines. The PSUs in PVRs are often marginal. -- Mike Tomlinson |
9200T going for landfill
In article , Steve Thackery
writes Was this written as a joke? Nope. Heat is bad for caps and the PSUs in PVRs are very often marginal - only just sufficient to run the hardware, so they run hot. -- Mike Tomlinson |
9200T going for landfill
In article , Johnny B Good
writes "Bad Caps" is a pretty common failure in most electronic kit. It's been the bane of PC motherboards for the past 15 years or so and it's, in this case, "(including noise on the 5V/12V lines)" the most likely cause (the alternative of inductors developing shorted turns is significantly less probable[1]). I've just looked at an external SCSI DLT tape drive. That had bad caps on the 12V output of the PSU, causing it to rise to 20V under load. No overvoltage protection was fitted. Needless to say, the drive is toast. -- Mike Tomlinson |
9200T going for landfill
In article en.co.uk,
Roderick Stewart writes I'm astonished by the number of electronic faults that are diagnosed remotely as requiring nothing more than replacement of all the capacitors, I have 25 years of experience, so do have an idea of what I speak. a procedure that with most modern circuitry would probably do more harm than good. Complete nonsense. -- Mike Tomlinson |
9200T going for landfill
In article en.co.uk,
Roderick Stewart writes Regarding my "more harm than good" comment, I was thinking of modern close- packed circuit boards, which do not in general lend themselves to frequent component replacement, if at all. Power supplies are not close-packed. By their very nature they have to have adequate spacing between tracks. I would not advise an inexperienced user to attempt a repair to any modern highly-integrated circuit board. -- (\__/) (='.'=) Bunny says Windows 7 is Vi$ta reloaded. (")_(") http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/windows_7.png |
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