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#1
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Just moved to a new home where the TV aerial not up to much - couple of
snowy analogue channels and nothing picked up on FTA. Previous tenants had a satellite dish mounted low on wall (so accessible), which they took with them, so I'm thinking of the Freesat. Don't want/won't have Sky. Are dishes much of a muchness? A 60cm Argos number is about £25 but doesn't specify (so i'd guess doesn't have?) dual LNB that the PVRs seem to need. I used a Humax FTA PVR and liked that a lot. Money isn't too much of an issue, and have in mind the Humax FoxsatHDR. I have a 37" 1080P telly with no satellite tuner. Thanks, Rob |
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#2
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"Rob" wrote in message b.com... Just moved to a new home where the TV aerial not up to much - couple of snowy analogue channels and nothing picked up on FTA. Previous tenants had a satellite dish mounted low on wall (so accessible), which they took with them, so I'm thinking of the Freesat. Don't want/won't have Sky. Are dishes much of a muchness? A 60cm Argos number is about £25 but doesn't specify (so i'd guess doesn't have?) dual LNB that the PVRs seem to need. I used a Humax FTA PVR and liked that a lot. Money isn't too much of an issue, and have in mind the Humax FoxsatHDR. I have a 37" 1080P telly with no satellite tuner. I have Freesat built in TV set, think if I was starting again like you, I would seriously consider this over a Freesat http://www.sky.com/shop/freesat/home/ I would consider it a better option. Think Sky better organized than Freesat technically etc. Regards David |
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#3
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On 17/06/2011 08:51, David wrote:
"Rob" wrote in message b.com... Just moved to a new home where the TV aerial not up to much - couple of snowy analogue channels and nothing picked up on FTA. Previous tenants had a satellite dish mounted low on wall (so accessible), which they took with them, so I'm thinking of the Freesat. Don't want/won't have Sky. Are dishes much of a muchness? A 60cm Argos number is about £25 but doesn't specify (so i'd guess doesn't have?) dual LNB that the PVRs seem to need. I used a Humax FTA PVR and liked that a lot. Money isn't too much of an issue, and have in mind the Humax FoxsatHDR. I have a 37" 1080P telly with no satellite tuner. I have Freesat built in TV set, think if I was starting again like you, I would seriously consider this over a Freesat http://www.sky.com/shop/freesat/home/ I would consider it a better option. Think Sky better organized than Freesat technically etc. Regards David Hmm, tempting. It's still Sky though and that's enough to put a lot of people off. Plus the box is very ugly complared to most Freesat boxes. I suppose it depends on whether or not you need 5HD and the other 5 spin offs. I can't remember the last time I watched 5. I'm not sure what you mean by "technically". |
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#4
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In article m,
Rob wrote: Are dishes much of a muchness? A 60cm Argos number is about £25 but doesn't specify (so i'd guess doesn't have?) dual LNB that the PVRs seem to need. You can get much better value online, for example from NetGadgets (who you can also order from through Amazon). -- Richard |
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#5
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On 17/06/2011 09:19, Silk wrote:
On 17/06/2011 08:51, David wrote: "Rob" wrote in message b.com... Just moved to a new home where the TV aerial not up to much - couple of snowy analogue channels and nothing picked up on FTA. Previous tenants had a satellite dish mounted low on wall (so accessible), which they took with them, so I'm thinking of the Freesat. Don't want/won't have Sky. Are dishes much of a muchness? A 60cm Argos number is about £25 but doesn't specify (so i'd guess doesn't have?) dual LNB that the PVRs seem to need. I used a Humax FTA PVR and liked that a lot. Money isn't too much of an issue, and have in mind the Humax FoxsatHDR. I have a 37" 1080P telly with no satellite tuner. I have Freesat built in TV set, think if I was starting again like you, I would seriously consider this over a Freesat http://www.sky.com/shop/freesat/home/ I would consider it a better option. Think Sky better organized than Freesat technically etc. Yes, I'd think it'd be quite slick and possibly a loss leader. Won't do Sky though unless a last resort. Regards David Thanks for feedback though - not a bad option. Hmm, tempting. It's still Sky though and that's enough to put a lot of people off. Plus the box is very ugly complared to most Freesat boxes. I suppose it depends on whether or not you need 5HD and the other 5 spin offs. I can't remember the last time I watched 5. Extra channels not of interest. Although ashamed to say I'll miss Dave as my TV wallpaper of choice. Rob |
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#6
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On Jun 17, 8:51*am, "David" wrote:
"Rob" wrote in message b.com... Just moved to a new home where the TV aerial not up to much - couple of snowy analogue channels and nothing picked up on FTA. Previous tenants had a satellite dish mounted low on wall (so accessible), which they took with them, so I'm thinking of the Freesat. Don't want/won't have Sky. Are dishes much of a muchness? *A 60cm Argos number is about £25 but doesn't specify (so i'd guess doesn't have?) dual LNB that the PVRs seem to need. I used a Humax FTA PVR and liked that a lot. Money isn't too much of an issue, and have in mind the Humax FoxsatHDR. I have a 37" 1080P telly with no satellite tuner. I have Freesat built in TV set, think if I was starting again like you, I would seriously consider this over a Freesat http://www.sky.com/shop/freesat/home/ I would consider it a better option. * Think Sky better organized than Freesat technically etc. If you want a subscription-free PVR then Sky is out of the question. End of story. Not sure what you mean by "Sky better organized than Freesat technically"... The Freesat-from-Sky EPG shows all the pay-TV channels that you _can't_ get - i.e. it shows more channels that you _can't_ receive than ones that you can. Very unhelpful. Freesat has BBC iPlayer, ITVplayer, extra BBC music/comedy/sport content, a genuine choice of boxes from the very basic to all-singing all-dancing... http://www.myechostar.com/ ....and new features coming all the time (we already have boxes with Sling support, DLNA + FTP, copying to USB drive, HbbTV browser just announced, etc) If you want to _pay_ for TV, then Sky is of course a great option and a very well thought out system. But to _record_ FTA TV, it's expensive, and lacks some of Freesat's really nice features. I'll grant you Sky has ?9? extra channels, though all Freesat boxes also have a "non Freesat" mode, opening the world to all FTA broadcasts, whether they're on Freesat's or Sky's EPG or not (like Sky's "other channels" menu). Some of the BBC's red button content doesn't always make it onto Freesat. It's there (if your box lets you tune to it), but not on the red button. None of the IP-only BBC content is available on Sky boxes. Cheers, David. |
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#7
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"Silk" wrote in message ... On 17/06/2011 08:51, David wrote: I'm not sure what you mean by "technically". Well Sky boxes and Remotes all work the same what ever make all update when necessary together, not read of Sky boxes having the recent problems I have had with my Panasonic Freesat with the BBC messing with the HD standards. Regards David |
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#8
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wrote in message ... On Jun 17, 8:51 am, "David" Freesat has BBC iPlayer, ITVplayer, ..... Not if you have a 2008 Panasonic model as I have. Regards David |
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#9
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On 17/06/2011 10:34, David wrote:
"Silk" wrote in message ... On 17/06/2011 08:51, David wrote: I'm not sure what you mean by "technically". Well Sky boxes and Remotes all work the same what ever make all update when necessary together, not read of Sky boxes having the recent problems I have had with my Panasonic Freesat with the BBC messing with the HD standards. You've just been unlucky. My Panasonic Freesat TV works fine. I didn't notice any problems with BBC HD. Sky and Freesat both use the same signal, so it's not the fault of Freesat if some receivers don't work properly. My last Sky box died, so I went Freesat and never looked back. |
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#10
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On 17/06/2011 10:37, David wrote:
wrote in message ... On Jun 17, 8:51 am, "David" Freesat has BBC iPlayer, ITVplayer, ..... Not if you have a 2008 Panasonic model as I have. That's the thing with Freesat. It's more of an open system than Sky. The alternative is no choice over the hardware and a locked down EPG. |
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