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MediaPortal 2
General
TV card crash and some other issues - preliminary thread
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<blockquote data-quote="Cordraconis" data-source="post: 1193900" data-attributes="member: 159447"><p>BIOS settings for PCIe power savings were disabled, so no change there.</p><p></p><p>Manually added a (undetected in scan) channel from the upper frequencies as in the Wiki --> Success!</p><p>Merged analog channel with the same DVB-C (EPG only) channel and cheched the guide --> Success!</p><p></p><p>Opened a detected analog channel (clicked Edit, like in this picture <a href="http://wiki.team-mediaportal.com/@api/deki/files/2644/=Combined_Channels.png" target="_blank">http://wiki.team-mediaportal.com/@api/deki/files/2644/=Combined_Channels.png</a> ) to compare to what I did. To my surprise I saw it was a Combined channel! There were 3 frequencies there (channel 16, 17 and 18.) Haven't checked other analog detected channels.</p><p>Now this raises the question of the chicken and the egg: did the crash cause the triple detection/combination of this channel, or is something wrong in the scanning parameters (for Belgium?) causing the tuner to jump around while finding a channel on multiple freq?</p><p>I can imagine when selecting this channel, the driver ASAP tries all 3 freq and then occasionaly crashes from the rapid tuning. (=still my theory.)</p><p></p><p>So now next on my list - when I get back at home - is deleting all scanned analog channels, then manually adding+mapping+EPGcombine them from the localized list at <a href="http://www.zenders.be" target="_blank">www.zenders.be</a></p><p>I think when every channel is only once in the database, this will again increase stability.</p><p>(Edit: try to type "9000" as area code in the website and click "zoek". You will see a list of the available frequencies in Ghent. Notice the big gap between 280 and 460MHz, I cannot find more info, but I think that is where the DVB-C transport streams are located.)</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>The older driver still hasn't been tried yet. No reason to for the moment.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cordraconis, post: 1193900, member: 159447"] BIOS settings for PCIe power savings were disabled, so no change there. Manually added a (undetected in scan) channel from the upper frequencies as in the Wiki --> Success! Merged analog channel with the same DVB-C (EPG only) channel and cheched the guide --> Success! Opened a detected analog channel (clicked Edit, like in this picture [URL]http://wiki.team-mediaportal.com/@api/deki/files/2644/=Combined_Channels.png[/URL] ) to compare to what I did. To my surprise I saw it was a Combined channel! There were 3 frequencies there (channel 16, 17 and 18.) Haven't checked other analog detected channels. Now this raises the question of the chicken and the egg: did the crash cause the triple detection/combination of this channel, or is something wrong in the scanning parameters (for Belgium?) causing the tuner to jump around while finding a channel on multiple freq? I can imagine when selecting this channel, the driver ASAP tries all 3 freq and then occasionaly crashes from the rapid tuning. (=still my theory.) So now next on my list - when I get back at home - is deleting all scanned analog channels, then manually adding+mapping+EPGcombine them from the localized list at [URL='http://www.zenders.be']www.zenders.be[/URL] I think when every channel is only once in the database, this will again increase stability. (Edit: try to type "9000" as area code in the website and click "zoek". You will see a list of the available frequencies in Ghent. Notice the big gap between 280 and 460MHz, I cannot find more info, but I think that is where the DVB-C transport streams are located.) The older driver still hasn't been tried yet. No reason to for the moment. [/QUOTE]
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TV card crash and some other issues - preliminary thread
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