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Mel

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Mar 17, 2007
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In South Wales there was “Rediffusion” which was a very early cable type system as there was no signal to the TV aerials. There was a switch on the windowsill that you had to twist to change channel. Only 3 channels of course.
Mel
 
Jul 18, 2017
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In South Wales there was “Rediffusion” which was a very early cable type system as there was no signal to the TV aerials. There was a switch on the windowsill that you had to twist to change channel. Only 3 channels of course.
Mel
We had Rediffusion TVs in the mid seventies. Definitely not the best Tv around at the time although it worked off a VHF or UHF aerial. No cabling in those days.
 
Feb 13, 2024
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In South Wales there was “Rediffusion” which was a very early cable type system as there was no signal to the TV aerials. There was a switch on the windowsill that you had to twist to change channel. Only 3 channels of course.
Mel
Was that the one's that you could rent?
 
Nov 6, 2005
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In South Wales there was “Rediffusion” which was a very early cable type system as there was no signal to the TV aerials. There was a switch on the windowsill that you had to twist to change channel. Only 3 channels of course.
Mel
Rediffusion was also in the North Staffordshire & South Manchester areas - only 2 TV channels at my Gran's in Stoke-on-Trent plus radio, BBC Home Service and Light Programme - we only had BBC TV at home
 
Jun 20, 2005
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Rediffusion was also in the North Staffordshire & South Manchester areas - only 2 TV channels at my Gran's in Stoke-on-Trent plus radio, BBC Home Service and Light Programme - we only had BBC TV at home
Visionhire and Radio Rentals at my parents. We shared the cost of the first 26” B&W with aerial on the top of the Telly
 
Aug 14, 2019
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To those who record Freeveiw, which recording device do you use?
I’d love to ditch Sky but my Mrs finds it far too easy to record stuff so I can’t get shot of it!
 
Nov 6, 2005
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To those who record Freeveiw, which recording device do you use?
I’d love to ditch Sky but my Mrs finds it far too easy to record stuff so I can’t get shot of it!
We use a Humax Foxsat HDR Personal Video Recorder (PVR) for recording but watch live programmes on Freeview - the PVR is used both at home and comes with us in the caravan, paired with a freestanding 60cm dish.
 
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Mar 14, 2005
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To those who record Freeveiw, which recording device do you use?
I’d love to ditch Sky but my Mrs finds it far too easy to record stuff so I can’t get shot of it!
I'm not quite sure what you mean by recording Freeview. Freeview is a steaming service, which the main channels (BBC and ITV) have agreed to support. Unless you have specialist recording gear you can't actually record it.

I have purchased BT HD recorder which can record two live TV programs at the same time. I have upgraded the HDD to an SSD which is far more responsive and physically even quieter. It has fast forward including 1minute jumps forward and 15sec backwards, so its easy to jump the adverts when playing back.
 
Nov 16, 2015
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We use a Huawei Digital box to record Freeview, about £120, records 4 different channels at the same time, about 1000 hrs of recordings.
Bought from Currys.
 
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Oct 8, 2006
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I'm not quite sure what you mean by recording Freeview. Freeview is a steaming service, which the main channels (BBC and ITV) have agreed to support. Unless you have specialist recording gear you can't actually record it.

I have purchased BT HD recorder which can record two live TV programs at the same time. I have upgraded the HDD to an SSD which is far more responsive and physically even quieter. It has fast forward including 1minute jumps forward and 15sec backwards, so its easy to jump the adverts when playing back.
Eh? Sorry Prof but you are well wrong there.
Freeview is an over-air broadcast service that carries the five main channels and many others. Agreed some of those channels can be delivered by broadband (a.k.a. streaming) but most are through your aerial. All transmitters (of which there are nearly 1200 in the UK) carry PSB1 (BBC), PSB2 (independent main stations) and PSB3 which carries a mixture of BBC and independent stations in HD. Main stations (i.e not relays) also have Com 4, 5, and 6 carrying bucket loads of other stations but as with PSB they are ALL off air. Some main stations broadcast local TV stations on Com 7 such as Leeds TV, York TV, etc and all of them are on channel 7*. The coverage of channel 7 is very limited so there should be no mutual interference. [PSB is Public Service Broadcasting, Com n is Commercial.]
[*Confusion point 1: Com7 is a seventh transmitter on the relevant site, but Local TV is station 7 - see below.]

You are probably confused by the fact that smart TV's as well as receiving off-air can also collect stations that are fed by broadband - such as BBC iPlayer, ITXx, My5 etc. Some recorders are able to use broadband fed stations as well.
If you have a suitable recorder with a twin digital TV receiver inside them you can record two stations whilst you watch a third. Humax has always been a popular brand, but others by Panasonic and Manhattan are also very good. Some of them (notably Manhattan) can also record off broadband. All of them by default are able to record HD whether your TV has HD capability or not.

There can be some confusion with the use of the word 'channel.' In analogue days there were five TV channels, BBC1, BBC2, ITV, Channel 4 and Five. Each of these five used one signal carrier transmission or channel so there was never confusion as to what meant what.
With digital transmissions - which have one multiplex on each signal carrier channel - the programs are converted into digital data and multiplexed or computer mixed together allowing as many as eight or more programs to be available on a single signal carrier channel.
On a personal basis I refer to the signal being radiated by the transmitter site as a channel, and what I watch at home - such as BBC1/ITV2/More4 etc- as stations.
So to recap, all transmitter sites - main or relays - carry PSB1-3 which in total presents 20 stations, but in addition main stations carry Coms 4, 5, and 6 (and some Com 7) which in total will decode into around 80 or so stations. Also each of the six over-airMultiplexes (or muxes for short) have the capability to carry audio only stations - i.e. radio - which is another 24.
 
Last edited:
Aug 14, 2019
90
39
10,585
Eh? Sorry Prof but you are well wrong there.
Freeview is an over-air broadcast service that carries the five main channels and many others. Agreed some of those channels can be delivered by broadband (a.k.a. streaming) but most are through your aerial. All transmitters (of which there are nearly 1200 in the UK) carry PSB1 (BBC), PSB2 (independent main stations) and PSB3 which carries a mixture of BBC and independent stations in HD. Main stations (i.e not relays) also have Com 4, 5, and 6 carrying bucket loads of other stations but as with PSB they are ALL off air. Some main stations broadcast local TV stations on Com 7 such as Leeds TV, York TV, etc and all of them are on channel 7*. The coverage of channel 7 is very limited so there should be no mutual interference. [PSB is Public Service Broadcasting, Com n is Commercial.]
[*Confusion point 1: Com7 is a seventh transmitter on the relevant site, but Local TV is station 7 - see below.]

You are probably confused by the fact that smart TV's as well as receiving off-air can also collect stations that are fed by broadband - such as BBC iPlayer, ITXx, My5 etc. Some recorders are able to use broadband fed stations as well.
If you have a suitable recorder with a twin digital TV receiver inside them you can record two stations whilst you watch a third. Humax has always been a popular brand, but others by Panasonic and Manhattan are also very good. Some of them (notably Manhattan) can also record off broadband. All of them by default are able to record HD whether your TV has HD capability or not.

There can be some confusion with the use of the word 'channel.' In analogue days there were five TV channels, BBC1, BBC2, ITV, Channel 4 and Five. Each of these five used one signal carrier transmission or channel so there was never confusion as to what meant what.
With digital transmissions - which have one multiplex on each signal carrier channel - the programs are converted into digital data and multiplexed or computer mixed together allowing as many as eight or more programs to be available on a single signal carrier channel.
On a personal basis I refer to the signal being radiated by the transmitter site as a channel, and what I watch at home - such as BBC1/ITV2/More4 etc- as stations.
So to recap, all transmitter sites - main or relays - carry PSB1-3 which in total presents 20 stations, but in addition main stations carry Coms 4, 5, and 6 (and some Com 7) which in total will decode into around 80 or so stations. Also each of the six over-airMultiplexes (or muxes for short) have the capability to carry audio only stations - i.e. radio - which is another 24.
I wish I’d never asked. 😂😂😂😜
Thanks Woodentop but that’s all well beyond my comprehension! 😢😢
 
Dec 27, 2022
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We had a Humax Freesat HD recording box that gave up the ghost for the second time (I replaced the HDD the first time) about 6 months ago. I replaced it with a Freeview HD recording box that so far we haven't used. We also have a 4K ROKU streaming stick and I think after this time I might just have persuaded my wife that streaming catch up is the way forward.
Good for me as nothing to take to the van (it has it's own ROKU) and no hard drive to give up the ghost.
Only downside with Freeview is that on HD you don't always get the local ITV channel. As an example we get Central South down here in Devon. SD is however local.
 

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