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#21
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On Sep 20, 12:31 pm, G-squared wrote:
On Sep 20, 7:43 am, "Mr. Land" wrote: snip Without knowing his location, channel number of the DTV and power level of the DTVs in his area, there is no way to make any kind of evaluation. A fellow video engineer I work with has the Hauppage 1600 and a 950 USB tuner and both work well. I have 3 ATI HDTV Wonder cards and they have 'normal' sensitivity. The comparison tuner is a Samsung SIR-T165. GG What is "normal" sensitivity? In terms of a dBm value? Here are 2 photos of my antenna into a Tektronix 2712 spectrum analyzer. Does this help? I have all the LA DTV pix http://www.flickr.com/photos/[email protected]/1333953816/ GG Wish I had one of those! Not sure I understand what this is showing - does this depict the strength of the signal coming from your antenna plotted against a range of frequencies? I see "-50 dBm" on the readout, how does that relate to the display? I'm guessing it's some kind of average, i.e. the scope is showing that on average you're getting -50 dBm out of your antenna. How far off is that guess? Let me take a WAG at how you intended me to interpret this - if this plot shows a healthy signal of -50dBm across the band of interest, any tuner with "normal" sensitivity shouldn't require more than that? Thanks a lot for the reply. |
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#22
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On Sep 20, 12:36 pm, "jolt" wrote:
"Mr. Land" wrote in message oups.com... On Sep 19, 3:40 pm, "jolt" wrote: "Mr. Land" wrote in message oups.com... Hi, Based on some excellent answers to my first noob question in this group, I bought a PCI DTV tuner card (Hauppauge WinTV-PVR-1600). My main requirements we includes hardware-based MPEG2 encoding, ATSC- capable, and PCI (not PCIe) interface. But the tuner sensitivity in this card seems pretty bad. Case in point: using rabbit ears having 300 ohm twinlead with a 75-ohn balun on the end - an $80 10 inch television can tune and display a fringe channel in my area (somewhat snowy, but watchable), while the Hauppauge cannot (behaves as if there's no signal at all). I've searched the Hauppauge site for technical specs in an attempt to find this card's rated tuner sensitivity (i.e. minimum RF signal strength required, for instance -75dBm) but can't find that. Are there any sites which would have ratings like these for these products? This seems like an important buying decision point, especially for ATSC (OTA) tuners. If the Hauppauge doesn't measure up to other brands with respect to this specification, it's going back to the store. Thanks for any help! Are you comparing the two using the same antenna are using the sets antenna vs. an indoor antenna. I am comparing the two with exactly the same antenna with exactly the same orientation (i.e. I am not moving the antenna at all, merely unplugging it from the little TV then plugging into the card's RF input.) On the portable your likely tuning for a NTSC signal which will be VHF and the ATSC channels are for the most part UHF. Are you comparing ATSC i.e. digital to NTSC analog, sorry it's a little confusing because you don't state which tuner you are checking the strength for. This particular model card is what they call a "Hybrid" - it actually has two tuners in it: a traditional analog VHF/UHF tuner, and a separate ATSC tuner. Each tuner has its own RF input (each has a standard "F" antenna input connector.) My comparison consisted of plugging the antenna into the small TV's antenna input connector, then removing it and plugging it into the RF input for the card's analog tuner. Again, while the little TV was able to give me a fairly decent picture, the card didn't even detect that channel. I know the card isn't defective, because if I give it a strong enough signal, it will work. I live in a fringe area, which is why I'm concerned with the RF input sensitivity of the card's tuners. I've got a 1600 and the ATSC tuner seem to tune as well as other similar tuners the NTSC is hooked to cable so haven't tried an antenna for tuning. It is possible the tuners will require more signal strength then your portable TV set dependent somewhat on how the software reacts to low signal strength Hmm, I don't see how software's going to effect the tuner sensitivity. Isn't that more of a function of the design/quality of the first stage RF amplifier inside the tuners? I.e. wouldn't it be a function of the hardware design? Unless they've designed it such that the software can control the gain of the RF stages, but I kind of doubt they're that sophisticated. Thanks for your reply. While allowing a television's NTSC tuner to function with a poor signal has no draw backs aside from poor picture quality, a PC tuner requires a solid signal so that during the process of converting the signal to a PEG file that it doesn't lock the system with errors. Software differs in what is considered a safe level to allow the software to display that the tuner see a signal. Good signal strength helps avoid phantom type problems, recording errors or system lockups. I've seen older style tuners that don't have an PEG encoder be much more flexible. I see, so the tuner may have below-par sensitivity by design. Thank you. |
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#23
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And you're testing with rabbit ears? That doesn't really make a hell of a lot of sense. Sure it does. Rabbit ears are going to give me very low RF levels - short of having an RF antennuator, they're a fast and easy way to see how a tuner performs under less-than-ideal conditions. I don't know about analog because I don't even have any tuners that work with NTSC. Mine are all first generation ATSC circa 2002. I originally bought the latest greatest (5th gen tuner at the time) at the latest greatest price too I might add. After comparing to the old ones I could get for under $20 now, I sold the expensive one. When you can buy 6 of them for what the 1 expensive one cost... Anyway, for ATSC, The software application does control the sensitivity of the card for ATSC lock. But that's not the same as controlling the RF gain of the tuner's input stages, like an AGC circuit. That sounds like "what level of signal am I going to require before I will attempt to decode the digital stream" vs "what gain do I want the early stage RF amplifiers to have inside the tuner". With the software I use, you can set the timeout to wait for a lock, and the signal strength needed to be considered a lockable station. The default wasn't long enough for a couple of weak stations around here. Does all software give you those options? Couldn't say. MythTV does. Key to any ATSC reception is the antenna. I'm about 42 miles from the towers and with my old uhf/vhf combo antenna I couldn't get one or two of the UHF ATSC stations (NTSC uhf had always been flacky too) until I added a decent UHF antenna. That's interesting. I've been using an old VHF/UHF antenna for our plasma, and I thought it was doing just fine - perhaps it'd be worthwhile to try a dedicated UHF antenna. Thanks for this information. Rabbit ears is about useless here. I'm still using the old antenna for vhf although it really needs to be replaced too, but works well with the one ATSC station on VHF here. So if you're really in a fringe area, rabbit ears just isn't going to cut it. Worry more about your antenna than the tuner. I suspect any PC tuner will work well with the proper antenna for the location. I know the old cheap ones I use do. I guess I've been laboring under the assumption that, given a decent antenna (NOT rabbit ears!), a tuner with better RF sensitivity will be able to, on average, obtain more channels at a sufficient enough signal for decoding than one with less sensitivity. I.e. if my given antenna delivers -60 dBm of signal for channel 2.1 and -40 dBm of signal for channel 7.1, and I hook it up to ATSC tuner "A" that has -50 dBm RF sensitivity, then I switch to ATSC tuner "B" with -75 dBm sensitivity, with tuner "A" I'll only be able to watch channel 7.1, but with "B" I'll get both channels. Does this not make sense? Thanks for taking the time to reply. |
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#24
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On Sep 20, 12:37 am, G-squared wrote:
On Sep 20, 12:16 am, wrote: On Sep 19, 1:00 pm, G-squared wrote: snip Without knowing his location, channel number of the DTV and power level of the DTVs in his area, there is no way to make any kind of evaluation. A fellow video engineer I work with has the Hauppage 1600 and a 950 USB tuner and both work well. I have 3 ATI HDTV Wonder cards and they have 'normal' sensitivity. The comparison tuner is a Samsung SIR-T165. GG This first comment isn't for the first party rather it is something of a half baked idea. Perhaps a standalone tuner somehow hooked to computer would be the way to go. Direct to a computer monitor it would surely work. Though I'd want to be about to record on HD for time shifting. I know this is half baked but is it possible? I suppose I'd still need software even if someone got it hooked up or set up correctly. I'd think (without real basis) a standalone tuner would likely be better engineered and hence better better at picking up a signal. Samsung makes one and there are others some . I'd think the first party should consider a UHF antenna. The problems with recording DTV is the data rate. While MPEG2 is not overly high at 19.3 megabits/second, getting that stream into the computer from an external tuner is a big chore. The tuner _could_ have a firewire port which is easiest but more likely what comes out is component analog or DVI / HDMI. Component analog need to be converted back to digital - at 1.5 GIGABIT/second (550 gigabyte/hour). This is a BIG deal to work with. The internal tuners simply hand over the MPEG2 stream at 20 megabits (75 times less data than your own converter). DVI / HDMI is already digital but need to be handled at full data rate so needs to be re-converted to MPEG 2 or 4. Bottom line - sell the tuner on eBay to someone who needs it and get a computer tuner - PCI or USB. FAR less aggravation and better results. As far as better engineered - who can tell? Will it last a few years? Is it sensitive anough? My first ATI tuner is 34 months old and doing fine. Performance is reliable at this point. The other 2 ATIs were from eBay so I don't know the total age, just that they've been here for over a year and also doing fine. GG Thank you very much. I'll wait a year and then when I replace my computer system an inner DTV card will be part on the new system. Mr Bills "new" operating system was enough to make me defer on getting a new computer system. I recently got a little HTV for personal use. Apparently I am 41 or 42 miles from the stations, the over-the-air digital signals are coming in better than the old analog signals. The digital signal from the public station does have some faults that I assume lays in the system. I get this stop action effect that reminds me of an old Realplayer video when one could still get content for it by way of dialup. A fault in compression or decompression???? |
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#25
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On Sep 24, 4:58 am, wrote:
On Sep 20, 12:37 am, G-squared wrote: On Sep 20, 12:16 am, wrote: On Sep 19, 1:00 pm, G-squared wrote: snip Without knowing his location, channel number of the DTV and power level of the DTVs in his area, there is no way to make any kind of evaluation. A fellow video engineer I work with has the Hauppage 1600 and a 950 USB tuner and both work well. I have 3 ATI HDTV Wonder cards and they have 'normal' sensitivity. The comparison tuner is a Samsung SIR-T165. GG This first comment isn't for the first party rather it is something of a half baked idea. Perhaps a standalone tuner somehow hooked to computer would be the way to go. Direct to a computer monitor it would surely work. Though I'd want to be about to record on HD for time shifting. I know this is half baked but is it possible? I suppose I'd still need software even if someone got it hooked up or set up correctly. I'd think (without real basis) a standalone tuner would likely be better engineered and hence better better at picking up a signal. Samsung makes one and there are others some . I'd think the first party should consider a UHF antenna. The problems with recording DTV is the data rate. While MPEG2 is not overly high at 19.3 megabits/second, getting that stream into the computer from an external tuner is a big chore. The tuner _could_ have a firewire port which is easiest but more likely what comes out is component analog or DVI / HDMI. Component analog need to be converted back to digital - at 1.5 GIGABIT/second (550 gigabyte/hour). This is a BIG deal to work with. The internal tuners simply hand over the MPEG2 stream at 20 megabits (75 times less data than your own converter). DVI / HDMI is already digital but need to be handled at full data rate so needs to be re-converted to MPEG 2 or 4. Bottom line - sell the tuner on eBay to someone who needs it and get a computer tuner - PCI or USB. FAR less aggravation and better results. As far as better engineered - who can tell? Will it last a few years? Is it sensitive anough? My first ATI tuner is 34 months old and doing fine. Performance is reliable at this point. The other 2 ATIs were from eBay so I don't know the total age, just that they've been here for over a year and also doing fine. GG Thank you very much. I'll wait a year and then when I replace my computer system an inner DTV card will be part on the new system. Mr Bills "new" operating system was enough to make me defer on getting a new computer system. I recently got a little HTV for personal use. Apparently I am 41 or 42 miles from the stations, the over-the-air digital signals are coming in better than the old analog signals. The digital signal from the public station does have some faults that I assume lays in the system. I get this stop action effect that reminds me of an old Realplayer video when one could still get content for it by way of dialup. A fault in compression or decompression???? I'm surprised no has mentioned this: http://www.blackmagic-design.com/products/intensity/ and the Pro version as well, for capturing HD content on your PC. As for the digital tuner, I bought one of the air2pc cards off Ebay. I'm happy with it, and much easier than the analog tuner card coupled with the voom box (for the digital tuner) that I was using before that. |
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#26
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On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 09:37:42 -0700, "Mr. Land"
wrote: Hi, Based on some excellent answers to my first noob question in this group, I bought a PCI DTV tuner card (Hauppauge WinTV-PVR-1600). My main requirements we includes hardware-based MPEG2 encoding, ATSC- capable, and PCI (not PCIe) interface. But the tuner sensitivity in this card seems pretty bad. Case in point: using rabbit ears having 300 ohm twinlead with a 75-ohn balun on the end - an $80 10 inch television can tune and display a fringe channel in my area (somewhat snowy, but watchable), while the Hauppauge cannot (behaves as if there's no signal at all). I've searched the Hauppauge site for technical specs in an attempt to find this card's rated tuner sensitivity (i.e. minimum RF signal strength required, for instance -75dBm) but can't find that. Are there any sites which would have ratings like these for these products? This seems like an important buying decision point, especially for ATSC (OTA) tuners. If the Hauppauge doesn't measure up to other brands with respect to this specification, it's going back to the store. Thanks for any help! I just wanted to throw in my 2 cents here. I am assuming that you are using the NTSC input on the 1600 since you mention you're trying to get the same channel that is snowy on your small TV. From previous experience with Hauppauge products I would say that you cannot use the NTSC tuner on the card as an example of how the ATSC tuner will perform. I have used Happauge NTSC/ATSC cards in the past with excellent ATSC tuners and really lousy NTSC ones. You really need to compare apples and apples here. See if someone you know can loan you a quality ATSC STB and compare the reception on it to the ATSC tuner on the 1600. DSF |
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