2021-02-07, 05:10 PM
(2021-02-06, 11:40 AM)Graham Wrote: My recordings made with a Hauppauge Quad HD sometimes have pixellation ... I have alsways assumed that it is a reception problem. I have tried with and without a booster on the aerial input but I have never been able to get a signal that is good all of the time. I haven't tried the sort of device comparison that you describe.
My guess is that the Quad HD is differently sensitive to the other devices that you have tried ... My only suggestion (if you want to go the extra mile and spend the extra money) ... get a signal quality meter and a variable booster so that you can adjust the signal input strength to a value that suits the Quad HD ... but that is only my best guess ... it's probably cheaper to stop using the Quad HD and buy a different tuner.
I have never noticed a heat problem but I have never investigated the heat of the tuners.
Edit: I have now seen your other post ... You have already been round the houses with signal quality and boosters and all that so I have nothing to tell you.
Thanks Graham,
I really appreciate that and your advice. Yes as you've seen I've been round that loop. I've tried a 20 dB amplifier and a variable attenuator, so I've swept between +/- 20 dB from "nominal" and the card produces the same results with all signal levels. I can rule it out as a reception issue as the Nova-T-500 and the 'unbranded' USB sticks all work fine from the same antenna feed.
It's interesting that you sometimes have pixilation too. Since my own experience, I now see several reviews on Amazon mentioning the same (links below for the community's sake). I usually discount these as people expecting too much from the toy aerial that comes in the box with DVB-T tuners, but now I wonder if this is an underlying design flaw in the Hauppauge quadHD.
It reminds me of the pre-analogue switch off days when DVB-T pixelation was common. I've invested enough in my aerial setup (receiving from three transmitters) that it has become a bit of a hobby, and I can see with a spectrum analyser that all the muxes are loud and clear, and with a DVB-T stick and analysis tool I can see that the BER on them remains zero over days. For the quadHD to see several packets dropped in an hour is definitely not right.
Hauppauge have been very proactive in helping we with the IR problem, so I'll reach out to them and see if they are aware of this as an issue and if, perhaps, it's on the PCI-E driver side of things. Hopefully it's not an issue with the tuner / demodulator chips.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/customer-rev...B01FMO2FIS
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/customer-rev...B01FEOJE30
https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/customer-rev...B01FEOJE30
"It's better than a box!"