2006-06-01, 09:58 PM
Ok, MVP is a great option if you want a independently functioning satellite.
But I have an A OR B situation and wondered if an AV transmitter might be a no brain option.
As opposed to the old RF transmitters this now operate in the 2.4GHz range and supposedly have a line of sight range of 100m. (sure you would never really get this but I only want 10 or 15)
Some even have remote 'blaster' type function where your remote signals are supposed to be relayed back to the source.
So has anyone tried these? Comments good or bad appreciated.
But I have an A OR B situation and wondered if an AV transmitter might be a no brain option.
As opposed to the old RF transmitters this now operate in the 2.4GHz range and supposedly have a line of sight range of 100m. (sure you would never really get this but I only want 10 or 15)
Some even have remote 'blaster' type function where your remote signals are supposed to be relayed back to the source.
So has anyone tried these? Comments good or bad appreciated.
Core2-E2180, 1G RAM, 1Gb-5450 Silent, 2Tb +300g HDDs.
Three tuners: [SIZE=2][SIZE=1]Twinhan DVB-T x 1, Hauppauge Nova 500T (dual) [/SIZE][/SIZE]
DTB Digital SD + HD content (PAL-MPEG2-AC3).
Custom case made very quiet. Zalman CPU cooler.
Sits in rack with other HiFi.
ParaLED to show tuner activity.
Display: 42" 1920x1080p Panasonic Plasma
1x wired MVP
1x PC client
[URL="http://web.aanet.com.au/media/"]
[/URL]
Three tuners: [SIZE=2][SIZE=1]Twinhan DVB-T x 1, Hauppauge Nova 500T (dual) [/SIZE][/SIZE]
DTB Digital SD + HD content (PAL-MPEG2-AC3).
Custom case made very quiet. Zalman CPU cooler.
Sits in rack with other HiFi.
ParaLED to show tuner activity.
Display: 42" 1920x1080p Panasonic Plasma
1x wired MVP
1x PC client
[URL="http://web.aanet.com.au/media/"]
[/URL]