Please ignore this thread - it can be closed. I went back into it and both appear live now. Weird.
I have a similar problem, although not as severe. With my TiVo, with one station (CBS - 56), one of the OTA tuners registers an 88 and the other one registers a 79. This significant discrepancy only happens with this one channel. With ALL the other channels, although there is a difference in signal strength between the two tuners, the difference it is only about 1-2, which I woudl expect is in "the margin of error." Anyone have any thoughts?Ed_Hunt said:I had this problem to a lesser degree, one tuner had half the signal of the other. D*TV swapped out the box for a new one, said the tuner was bad. This fixed the problem.
I'm talking about the OTA tuner so it is only one coax cable that is used for both internal OTA tuners. As a result, it's not the cable. I'm just at a loss as to how I could get the results I am getting.Wayne D Johnson said:Do-over fixed mine (happened once recently). I also had the bad tuner problem that I fixed myself (bad cable). If both tuners are working (down arrow), then no problem.
My guess is that the different readings are due to slight differences in how each OTA tuner handles multipath. Remember that the signal reading is not really "strength", it's more an indicator of signal "quality" as determined by parameters like bit error rates. In my case, I have one channel that displays very different readings on each tuner (90/72), and it's the one transmitter that's farther away and has significant multipath (as viewed by the equivalent analog channel on an analog TV tuner). All of my other OTA channels produce equivalent readings on both tuners.RMSko said:I'm talking about the OTA tuner so it is only one coax cable that is used for both internal OTA tuners. As a result, it's not the cable. I'm just at a loss as to how I could get the results I am getting.
Its the two internal cables that are the problem, not the external coax.RMSko said:I'm talking about the OTA tuner so it is only one coax cable that is used for both internal OTA tuners. As a result, it's not the cable. I'm just at a loss as to how I could get the results I am getting.
That's what I thought and D* is sending me a replacement receiver. Hopefully I won't have similar problems with the new receiver.litzdog911 said:If the "poorer" readings on the 2nd tuner are causing you reception problems -- since you can't control which tuner the DVR uses for recording -- you're only option is to replace the DVR. Other folks who've done that have reported that it usually solves the problem.
It's worth a try. Radio Shack has a nice adjustable attenuator that costs less than $10.RMSko said:That's what I thought and D* is sending me a replacement receiver. Hopefully I won't have similar problems with the new receiver.
Do you think an attenuator could help?
Really? I sure can't explain why that would make a difference. The single OTA input is split inside the HR10-250 to feed each OTA tuner module, so it's hard to see why jiggling the single input cable would make a difference. But it's one more tip to add to our bag of suggestions.RMSko said:Well I received a new reciever from D*, but as it ends up I'm going to send it back without even opening the box as I don't need it. Before I tried the new TiVo, I "jiggled" the coax in the back of the HD TiVo for the OTA input and it changed the results signifcantly! Apparently, at least for me, the angle of the coax into the OTA input on the back of the TiVo afftects the signal strength (hopefully that makes sense).
It seemed crazy to me as well, but when I angled the coax cable down the two internal OTA tuners had identical readings and when I angled it up they were off by about 10. I repeated the test a few times and each time it had the same results. I can't explain it though.litzdog911 said:Really? I sure can't explain why that would make a difference. The single OTA input is split inside the HR10-250 to feed each OTA tuner module, so it's hard to see why jiggling the single input cable would make a difference. But it's one more tip to add to our bag of suggestions.
It seems like OTA DTV signals are like Ohio weather: if you don't like it, wait a minute.litzdog911 said:My guess is that the different readings are due to slight differences in how each OTA tuner handles multipath. Remember that the signal reading is not really "strength", it's more an indicator of signal "quality" as determined by parameters like bit error rates. In my case, I have one channel that displays very different readings on each tuner (90/72), and it's the one transmitter that's farther away and has significant multipath (as viewed by the equivalent analog channel on an analog TV tuner). All of my other OTA channels produce equivalent readings on both tuners.
If the "poorer" readings on the 2nd tuner are causing you reception problems -- since you can't control which tuner the DVR uses for recording -- you're only option is to replace the DVR. Other folks who've done that have reported that it usually solves the problem.