![]() ![]() This is due to the new requirement for Cisco Smart licensing which makes it almost impossible to get the correct licenses and support applied to your router if you purchased it second hand.Īs Infinity broadband (FTTC/Fibre to the Cabinet) has been common place for several years there are a number of documents out there to describe how to configure a Cisco router for this service. Caution should be taken when considering buying a second hand router. If you are a home user Reconsider using Cisco as a manufacturer for your router. By proceeding you confirm you have read and agree to these terms. Please ensure you read the full disclaimer before proceeding. I had the 4g filter aerial fitted 3 weeks ago.Disclaimer: In no event will I be liable for any loss or damage including without limitation, indirect or consequential loss or damage, or any loss or damage whatsoever arising from loss of data or profits arising out of, or in connection with, the use of this guide. the only other thing that is near is the BT broadband box 2 feet away and the BT telephone at same distance. I will test later on unplugging both of these units to see if they are interfering. I also have a DVD player, plugged in but not switched on. Do you get any internet TV error messages such as IPC6023? And what other AV equipment do you have under the TV? Please list all of it, thanks.Ok if you mean audio and video equipment i only have a Sony surround sound system, when switched in standby i still get the pixalating issue when watching BT channels (ex internet channels). Which points to AV interference with the HDD. Your IPTV (internet TV) recording problem isn't one that has been reported before and so is unique, as the box just should just record the unpixelated picture as it sees it. This points to an external source as the problem and not the boxes themselves. Three boxes and an engineers visit later the problem still occurs. i can only watch internet channels live without any issues. I know our analogue used to flutter a bit when we lived in Brache Court, though I daresay things have moved on since our souvenir of the first moon landing was a photo of the screen of our black and white TV :-)to be honest i can live with the interference on the recordings, i just want to be able to watch the channels on the bt box as im paying for this service and i cant watch it. He also told me to contact the federation of aerials, i contacted them and they wholely support the aerial guy and said the problem would be either the box or the cables from it, bt engineers said im just unlucky i have interference nothing wrong with the aerial they cant fault it. I know our analogue used to flutter a bit when we lived in Brache Court, though I daresay things have moved on since our souvenir of the first moon landing was a photo of the screen of our black and white TV :-)The aerial fitter said if you take the bt box out of the equation are there any problems with the picture, theres not so that answers his question, i just paid him for a new aerial and 4g filter with 2 way splitter (£215), he said he can replace but it will cost me the same amount of money for another type of aerial and may have the same issue. ![]() I know our analogue used to flutter a bit when we lived in Brache Court, though I daresay things have moved on since our souvenir of the first moon landing was a photo of the screen of our black and white TV :-) ![]() Might be worth a chat anyway, as the local fitters will know if there are special airport considerations in your area, If so, you need your aerial fitter back to remedy the issue of noise injection from the aerial. Might be worth pulling the aerial cable out, as a test, when making an Internet recording, and seeing if that helps. I could see how planes going up from Luton Airport (shades of Lorraine Chase!) might engender atmospheric turbulence, and a fair amount of RF, though I would expect that to affect broadcast signals rather than Internet recordings. Indeed, it might anyway, if the cable is injecting noise into the YouView box circuitry, though that might be unlikely. If so, it is the recording process that is being affected, which makes it less likely changing the HDMI cable would help.īut if the pixelation alters, then yes, a new and better shielded HDMI cable might well help. If you replay, a few times, a piece of a recording that is pixelated, do you get exactly the same pixelation in exactly the same place each time? It might be useful to know if the interference is on the recording, or to the recording. ![]()
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