<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 1:50 PM, Kevin Kuphal <<a href="mailto:kkuphal@gmail.com">kkuphal@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
<div class="gmail_quote"><div><div></div><div class="Wj3C7c">On Fri, Apr 25, 2008 at 3:32 PM, Eric C <<a href="mailto:runericrun@gmail.com" target="_blank">runericrun@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><span>Hi everyone, this is my first post so please be gentle <img alt="Wink" border="0"> <br>
<br>I've lurked for a bit in various places and been checking up posts, and have additionally done hours upon hours of research and I can't seem to get a clear answer. So I'm hoping that posting my setup idea will get some much appreciated input. <br>
<br>Because I am frustrated and confused as hell. heh. <br><br><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Here's the scenario:</span> <br><br>We have the Basic Digital package (or whatever) with Comcast, in Mountain View. Have the STB which just has the S-Video out and I believe the RCA video/2-channel audio, it's the slightly newer model that looks like the black Motorola box but is branded differently. I was going to get a TiVO, but decided instead to download the Mythbuntu distro and convinced my roommate that it was better than TiVO [in so many ways]. <br>
<br><span style="text-decoration: underline;">What we want to do: <br></span><br>Plug the cable directly into the tuner, and S-video out to the TV... so we can do Live TV, recording, ETC from the MythTV box. Just like a TiVO. He also wants to be able to access On-Demand. The channels we're most concerned about, are sub-100 (Cartoon Network for Adult Swim, History/Discovery Channel, etc). We have a standard TV and don't plan on upgrading to a 1080p TV until some time early next year, and thus don't care much about HD right now. We want to play DVDs right from it, and the shows we've saved as well as streaming from my PC of video and audio. <br>
<br><br>I was going to obtain a PVR-150 to use (and if we need to, add another for a dual-150 setup), but noticed it was for NTSC only. So I settled on the HVR-1800 because it can to A/NTSC as well as OTA. Then at that point, I wasn't sure if either one was going to work with the Comcast Digital service without the STB. I'd rather get the 150 so I don't have to worry about getting a remote, but if I need to, I can pick up a StreamZap at Fry's. <br>
<br><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Ultimately:</span> <br><br>We want to be able to use the MythTV box for everything, and take the STB out of the mix. I have a feeling though, that we're going to need to IR Blast it and have it do the channels for us pushing the video down through the S-Video. <br>
<br>Which I guess means if I want to play back, I'll have to S-Video out from the video card back to the TV. That requires changing inputs on the stereo receiver (*sigh* one input for watching normal TV, a different input for watching the Myth box...), and I think that's a bit too much for him to handle. <br>
<br>-and at which point, I'm not sure if I should get the PVR-150 or the HVR-1800<br><br>So. The options are confusing, and I'm not sure. I just don't know what setup is going to work. Suggestions?</span></blockquote>
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</div></div><div>It's not terribly confusing. First, you need to hook up your cable, without the set-top box, to a cable ready TV and determine what channels you get "in the clear. This is independent of Myth but will give you an idea of what your service provides.</div>
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<div>If the clear channels are all the content you want to watch: PVR-150, connect to coax INPUT on the PVR-150. Sound will be captured via the tuner in this case.</div>
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<div>If the clear channels are only a subset of your content, the your STB is required. In this case, you hook it up to the s-video INPUT on your PVR-150 and use an IR blaster to change channels on the STB as needed by Myth. This will always get you the channels you've paid for at the expense of some simplicity. You will also need to capture the audio via audio inputs on your sound card in this scenario.</div>
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<div>In both cases, Myth will output to your TV via the s-video output of your videocard/motherboard and audio via the sound card.</div>
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<div>THe HVR-1800 is an HD tuner and will only tune clear QAM channels that Comcast provides you. This is likely to be a subset of the clear channels you get without the set top and totally at their discretion. While not a bad idea as a second tuner (if you want to get a little HD content - this is what I do with a combination of 2 AverMedia A180 HD tuners and a PVR-500), it is unlikly to be sufficient for your total needs.</div>
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<div>I hope that helps.</div>
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<div>Kevin</div></font></div>
<br></blockquote><div>Thanks for the input, that does help clarify it a bit. If I go solely off of what you've stated, then I WILL need the STB... because I will need to access On Demand.<br><br>However that DOES seem to clarify my question of using the MythTV box for "everything". I'll have the STB transmitting video to the PVR, changing channels as necessary, and outputting the signal through the video card to the TV. This means I'll have all the time shift, plus recording... but only one channel at a time unless I get a second STB =\ but that doesn't sound right...<br>
<br>So I guess it'll be an issue of getting two 150s... one that directly has the cable going to it, for all our sub-100 recording pleasure... and a second one so we can get our OnDemand and such. -but wouldn't the HVR-1800 take care of that?<br>
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