Hello Guest, if you are reading this it means you have not registered yet. Please take a second, Click here to register, and in a few simple steps you will be able to enjoy our community and use our OpenViX support section.
Page 4 of 4 FirstFirst ... 234
Results 46 to 54 of 54

Thread: No Satellite signal on New TV

  1. #46
    adm's Avatar
    Title
    Forum Supporter
    Donated Member
    Join Date
    Sep 2014
    Location
    Southend on Sea, UK
    Posts
    1,697
    Thanks
    67
    Thanked 668 Times in 522 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by dsayers View Post
    I had installer out last year because trees in the next garden was interfering with the signal. He put the dish on my chimney.

    No chance of me trying to re align it if I have issues in the future
    Depending on the alignment of your house a dish can also be installed on the "wrong" side looking over the roof.

    Code:
    http://www.wrightsaerials.tv/reference/dish-screened-by-roof.pdf
    With a lot of old properties the only thing keeping the chimneys standing is the aerial wires lashed around them
    Xtrend ET10K, 2 x satellite tuners 28.2 (Sky FTA), 2 x hybrid (UK Freeview), Zgemma H9S (satellite)

  2. #47

    Title
    Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2015
    Posts
    76
    Thanks
    21
    Thanked 16 Times in 16 Posts
    So I had the SAT installer out and he measured the satellite signal using his equipment and it registered no signal at all.
    I still don't understand how the old TV was able to get a signal.

    He installed new terrestrial and satellite cables as well as a new LNB and all working perfectly now.

    I was interested to test if the Sony W800 could potentially replace the SAT box altogether and simplify the setup.
    I was able to confirm it does indeed have a SAT tuner despite the specs saying otherwise.

    The functionality is mostly there but the big downside is that it takes about 6 button presses to switch between SAT and Terrestrial channels. If anyone knows a quick way, please let me know.
    In addition to the above, channel changing is much slower and only now/next is available on the TV guide for satellite. I'd say the recording is unreliable as well but didn't try it.

    I setup HDMI-CEC so at least only one remote now. All working well except the channel up/down buttons still control the TV and flick back to the TV's own Tuner rather than the sat box's HDMI feed.
    Undoing it just requires clicking the input button back to the SAT box.

  3. #48

    Title
    Forum Supporter
    Donated Member
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Posts
    3,044
    Thanks
    1,373
    Thanked 433 Times in 397 Posts
    Maybe wind moved something and it made and broke it again.

    Combo box is easier on the brain for me. Always keep the sat box.

  4. #49
    Joe_90's Avatar
    Title
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    Wicklow, Ireland
    Posts
    4,244
    Thanks
    1,315
    Thanked 1,148 Times in 908 Posts
    You're wasting your time expecting the TV to have a full programme guide (EPG) for the satellite channels unless it is branded with Freesat logo. I have an old (2008) Sony TV with a sat tuner and Freesat branded, so I do get a 7 day EPG, but it's a pain to use the built-in features and it's slow to switch between terrestrial and satellite (as you have found with the newer model).

    Keep your combo box as @cactikid suggests and you will be better off for EPG and stable recording. Glad you (and the sat installer) finally resolved the issues!
    GB Quad Plus, Mut@nt HD51, AX HD61, 80cm dish and Supreme Dark motor. Sony TA-AN1000, Sony UBP-X800M2 Bluray, Odroid N2+ (CoreElec), Monitor Audio Bronze 5.1 speakers

  5. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Joe_90 For This Useful Post:

    abu baniaz (25-01-23),cactikid (24-01-23)

  6. #50
    Huevos's Avatar
    Title
    Administrator
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Location
    38.5N, 0.5W
    Posts
    13,945
    Thanks
    2,062
    Thanked 5,145 Times in 3,395 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by dubrov View Post
    they only moved to FTA satellite around 12 years ago
    In 2003
    Help keep OpenViX servers online.Please donate!

  7. #51
    Joe_90's Avatar
    Title
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    Wicklow, Ireland
    Posts
    4,244
    Thanks
    1,315
    Thanked 1,148 Times in 908 Posts
    For context - @dubrov's parents may well have moved to satellite only 12 years ago. Most of Dublin and some suburban areas outside Dublin (including where I live) were cabled by various companies in the '80s and '90s and taken over by NTL eventually. This was an analogue service and re-distributed Irish and the main British channels. With the rise in Sky Digiboxes around 1999/2000, some cable subscribers would have moved, but when Sky+ and HD arrived in 2006, more and more people moved to satellite. My own Sky dish and cabling are in place since May 2006 when HD was launched. I dropped the Sky sub in 2012 or thereabouts when my last child who had interest in Premier League football left the nest. Virgin Media took over most of the cabled network in the 2010's and upgraded the coax and now offer broadband and a full range of digital TV services, so it sits alongside telecom providers VDSL broadband/TV, pure fibre and satellite options in many suburban areas.
    GB Quad Plus, Mut@nt HD51, AX HD61, 80cm dish and Supreme Dark motor. Sony TA-AN1000, Sony UBP-X800M2 Bluray, Odroid N2+ (CoreElec), Monitor Audio Bronze 5.1 speakers

  8. #52
    Huevos's Avatar
    Title
    Administrator
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Location
    38.5N, 0.5W
    Posts
    13,945
    Thanks
    2,062
    Thanked 5,145 Times in 3,395 Posts
    2003 was the year that BBC and ITV were no longer encrypted on 28şE. Before that you needed a Sky sub to receive them.

    https://www.warc.com/newsandopinion/...ap/en-gb/13316
    Help keep OpenViX servers online.Please donate!

  9. #53

    Title
    Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2015
    Posts
    76
    Thanks
    21
    Thanked 16 Times in 16 Posts
    Yes, they first had a huge aerial on roof which brought in free Irish (RTE1 and RTE2) and UK channels (BBC1, BBC3 , UTV and Channel4).
    Cablelink with pay TV then moved in offering a better signal and wider range of channels (Sky, MTV etc.). The big aerials were generally taken down at that stage.
    After that Sky became popular and I think they eventually moved to it but only kept it for 1/2 years before going FTA.

    I think pay TV is far more popular in Ireland than the UK as most people want the free Irish channels (via Aerial) and UK channels (via satellite) on a single list with reliable recording.
    Combo boxes seem to be the only way to get it without paying a monthly sub and there is a bit of setup and maintenance required.

  10. #54
    Joe_90's Avatar
    Title
    Moderator
    Join Date
    Mar 2014
    Location
    Wicklow, Ireland
    Posts
    4,244
    Thanks
    1,315
    Thanked 1,148 Times in 908 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Huevos View Post
    2003 was the year that BBC and ITV were no longer encrypted on 28şE. Before that you needed a Sky sub to receive them.

    https://www.warc.com/newsandopinion/...ap/en-gb/13316
    The reference to the move to FTA wasn't when British domestic channels stopped encrypting - @dubrov's folks were on cable TV in 2003. Only later they moved to FTA satellite. My own setup was on a mix of FTA (Freesat receiver) and Sky until about 2014.
    GB Quad Plus, Mut@nt HD51, AX HD61, 80cm dish and Supreme Dark motor. Sony TA-AN1000, Sony UBP-X800M2 Bluray, Odroid N2+ (CoreElec), Monitor Audio Bronze 5.1 speakers

Page 4 of 4 FirstFirst ... 234

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
This website uses cookies
We use cookies to store session information to facilitate remembering your login information, to allow you to save website preferences, to personalise content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners.