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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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HDTV card selection
The broadcast flag is almost there (well, not for a while now but that nice congress of yours can still do us in) and although as a Canadian it is not yet clear what the future will bring I'm starting the quest for the best HDTV card.
I looked around and there are a few alternatives to HDTV. As you have guessed, I have a hard time choosing. I read a bunch of reviews, pretty much all of which said "cool" but no comparative study so here is a quick recap for each card. Please feel free to comment with your experience or tell me if something is missing. If you have guesstimates of CPU use for playing and recording for the cards I'd also like to be able to compare with that. Thanks to stranger, I now know that there is no encoding done, the digital stream is just saved by those cards so CPU for writing shouldn't be an issue and CPU for reading should be pretty much the same since it's the same stream. So far the Fusion has the lead Gog ********************************************************** DVICO FusionHDTV3 Gold MSRP: 199 Froogle: 149$-175$ OTA and QAM CX23881 chipset HDTV ATSC tuner with s-video in System Requirements: Pentium 3 750MHz CPU (with ATI RADEON series with DxVA VGA, nVidia MX440, FX series) Pentium 4 1.6GHz with DDR266 or faster memory for non DxVA VGA Windows ME/ 2000/ XP or later version of Windows Good: Tested with the Stealth's HDTV Network encoder Available in low profile Bad: Sources: http://www.fusionhdtv.co.kr/Eng/ http://www.digitalconnection.com/Pro.../fusion3qt.asp http://www.htpcnews.com/main.php?id=fusion3_1 ********************************************************** ATI HDTV wonder MSRP: 199$ Froogle: ~150$ OTA No QAM HDTV ATSC, analog NTSC and breakout box (s-video and composite audio/video) Antenna included in the package The remote wonder is also in the package NXT2004 Digital Modulator System Requirements: * Intel® Pentium® 4, Celeron™, AMD Athlon® or compatible, operating at 1.3GHz or greater * 256MB of system memory * Windows® XP with Service Pack 1 or higher * Windows® XP Media Center Edition 2005 † Good: Tested with the Stealth's HDTV Network encoder Tunes HDTV ATSC and analog signal Bad: Driver were unstable but it's getting better ATI's time shifting software sucks (who cares...) System requirements Difficult installation Nicknamed the HTTV "blunder" http://www.extremetech.com/article2/...1641011,00.asp Not available in Canada (due to low penetration rate of OTA HDTV stations) Sources: http://www.ati.com/products/hdtvwonder/ http://graphics.tomshardware.com/video/20040917/ http://www.extremetech.com/article2/...1641011,00.asp http://reviews.designtechnica.com/re..._main9163.html ********************************************************** Avermedia A180 MSRP: Froogle: ~80$ OTA Don't know about QAM System requirements: * CPU: Intel® Pentium® IV 2.4 GHz, 256 RAM or higher * Operating System: Windows® XP Media Center Edition 2005 This is a MCE card. You need to use BDA drivers to use it outside of MCE. Good: Tested with the Stealth's HDTV Network encoder Cheap! "A180 and ATI HDTV Wonder are pretty close to being the same quality. Most people wouldn't notice the difference." Bad: Very steep system requirements New card, not much feedback on the web yet. Sources: http://www.aver.com/products/tvtuner...mce_a180.shtml ********************************************************** VBox DTA-151 Price: 249$ http://www.visiblelight.com/mall/pro...w.aspx?pid=614 OTA Don't know about QAM HDTV ATSC tuner with s-video in Proprietary chipset System requirements: * Windows 98, SE, 2000, Windows XP * Pentium III 600 MHz processor or better Good: Picture quality comparable to the wonder Seems to work well with MCE 2005 Bad: Expensive Unknown card, not tested with the HDTV Network encoder, may be harder to find Source: http://www.vboxcomm.com/ http://htpcnews.com/main.php?id=vbox_1 ********************************************************** MyHD MDP-130 Price: ~250 http://www.ramelectronics.net/html/hdtv-cards.html#myhd ~315 with DVI daughterboard http://www.copperbox.com/lite/mdp130.php OTA and QAM Good: Hardware decoder (the only one in this list) DVI output through optional daughterboard Included timeshifting software not as bad as other bundled software tunes ATSC and NTSC Bad: Expensive Not tested with Sage Haven't heard it works with MCE either Source: http://www.digitalconnection.com/pro...deo/mdp130.asp http://www.ramelectronics.net/html/hdtv-cards.html#myhd *Edit(05-07-2005) to remove the no hardware encoder caveat *Edit(05-11-2005) to add MyHD MDP-130 Last edited by Gog; 05-11-2005 at 01:36 PM. |
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I have the ati blunder, it's not been a blunder for me, but I haven't tried the other cards. I figured ati would eventually fix it, and the avermedia wasn't available when I bought.
None of the cards have hardware encoding, hdtv is broadcast already compressed and the cards just write the info to the hard drive. The decoding is the issue, you need a good decoder, good gpu, and powerful cpu for any of these solutions to play back smoothly. Only the MyHD cards have hardware decoding, none of the above do. I chose ati because they're huge and not going anywhere, and the card works great for people in MCE so the rest of the problems I don't care about, I just wish sage would officially support it. The fusion's advantage is cable support, but that's pretty sketchy still. The Avermedia is cheap, and would be what I would buy if I were looking now, and planning on putting it into a sage or mce pc. You might try asking on avsforum, people are more critical of hardware there, there aren't many hdtv viewers here since sage doesnt' support it.
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sagetv system: dell 8400, Winxpmce, p4 3.0, 1gb ddr2, 160 gb hdd x 2, 300gb hdd x 1, geforce 6800, nvidia oem purevideo decoder, pvr 250, hdtv blunder, audigy 2 zx, mce remote, logitech cordless desktop |
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If you want an HD card, get the A180 now (cheap) and wait for the whole CableCard/PC thing to shake out.
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Thanks to Gog for posting his research here. With the development of Stealth's HDTV for SageTV, I'm interested in HDTV tuners now and nice to get overall summery of what's currently avialable.
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Mayamaniac - SageTV 7.1.9 Server. Win7 32bit in VMWare Fusion. HDHR (FiOS Coax). HDHR Prime 3 Tuners (FiOS Cable Card). Gemstone theme. - SageTV HD300 - HDMI 1080p Samsung 75" LED. |
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Requirements vary between systems, but I have an ATI HDTV Wonder, which works great for me in MCE, and playback only uses about 20-25% on my P4 3.0GHZ. This is due to the Decoders, Nvidia for me, and the video card, ATI 9800. Don't expect to get the same results with an ATI 7000 and a 2ghz CPU.
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Mike Janer SageTV HD300 Extender X2 Sage Server: AMD X4 620,2048MB RAM,SageTV 7.x ,2X HDHR Primes, 2x HDHomerun(original). 80GB OS Drive, Video Drives: Local 2TB Drive GB RAID5 |
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Ok childish i know but i just couldn't resist it lol. Yeah i would say get a fusion but with the way things are at this time it's better to go for the a180 at least you don't have to evest much till the cablecard issue is sorted out. Gives you a cheap entry with not much lost if things don't work out.
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AMD athlon64X2 3800+, Foxconn (Winfast 6150K8MA-8EKRS) 6150, Windows Vista Ultimate, Geforce FX EVGA 7800gt CO, 1gig 400mhz ddr Ram, 500 gig Western Digital Sata 2 hard drive 8 meg cache, Tuners: Wintv PVR 500 dual tuner, Fusion3 GoldT, NEC 3540a dvd+rw, Sagetv 5.0 Dell 20.1" 2005FPW |
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On the XCard for decoding. The XCard is not capable of decoding HD resolution streams. it can only decode up standard TV resolution. It can scale standard resolution up to HD, but not playback actual HD Streams.
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SageTV 6.6, 100Mb LAN Living Room: WinXP Pro SP2, AMD XP3200+, 1GB, 1.3TB 3ware 9500S12 RAID5, GigaByte GA7N400Pro2, 2xVBOX USB2 HD Tuner<-Antennna, 1xHDHR<-Antennna , HD100 to HDMI Splitter 1080i->32" 4:3 HDTV or 1080i->92" 1080P LCD Projector Kitchen: WinXP Home SP2, Celeron 2.0Ghz, 512MB, 40GB, Saphire ATI MB, ATI9200->19"LCD 2 BedRooms: MediaMVP |
#9
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OK, I have what may be a dumb question as I am a Noob with the whole HDTV thing.
- If I get an HDTV card for OTA broadcasts ONLY (no cable now or in future), with the right video card can the SDTV broadcasts be output to a regular old fashioned TV? For that matter, can the HDTV broadcasts be converted to work as well? I would probably just be using the component out to my TV. I'm just looking to get better broadcast quality at home. My analog setup is horrible on all but a couple channels (I live in LA). I'll probably get a newer Media Center PC, so I'd like to know what to look for (processor, video card, etc.). Thanks!! I was trying a PVR-150/SageTV setup with my regular analog antenna setup on an old computer, but it just wasn't cutting it (computer too old) so I'm returning it. But the quality was really bad, and I know bad in=bad out. |
#10
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I'm using an A180 and during capture using HDNE and Sage on a PIII 933 it is about 80% cpu load. For the PVR250 it is ~10%, I've not looked in a long time. Playback for me on a AMD 2500+ with integrated NVIDIA G4 MX and Sonic decoders is ~25% cpu.
The one card not mentioneda above is the new Fusion5, some talk that it has better reception qualities. |
#11
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Wow, those are some high utilizations, I'm at about 5% recording with HDNE on my A64 3400.
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