📡 Elevate Your Viewing Experience!
The NEW FULL HD Combo Freeview HD + Satellite HD Receiver is a versatile entertainment solution that offers access to 700-800 TV channels and 90-100 radio stations without any monthly fees. With built-in Wi-Fi, dual tuners, and USB recording capabilities, it transforms your TV into a smart media hub, allowing you to enjoy live TV, record shows, and access online apps seamlessly.
S**S
Receiver
Great item works well
J**D
Very cheap....and useless.
Honestly...one star is too many. This receiver is the worst one I have ever come across. It's slow, glitchy, badly organised menu's make it an absolute nightmare to do anything meaningful. To be fair, if all you want to do is tune in every station available, it can do this with relative ease, and if you happy with channels being shuffled all over the place then this could be the one for you. However, if you like to organise channels, ie, BBC1 on 1 or 101 etc, it is going to take you a lifetime to manually move each channel individually through the hundreds of channels to the desired location, over and over, then the receiver decides to randomly restart whenever it all gets too much for it, which to be fair, is quite regular. Do yourself a favour, spend a few extra quid or even get a second hand openbox V5S or V8S. Far easier to use.
C**W
It does work
The media could not be loaded. As other reviewers have said, setup is a but fiddly. A few main things about the satellite setup: (1) delete all saved channels before scanning. (2) set up your favourites via the menu button - this will be the easiest way to get to preferred programmes. (3) you can organise favourites into a number of columns/categories. (4) avoid ticking any channel with a green dollar sign next to it - these are paid channels. (5) the instructions say you can only use wifi by buying a dongle, but mine has built-in wifi and connected successfully to youtube. (6) you can record to a USB stick and use the recordings elsewhere. The files appear on the USB drive with an obscure extension which appears to be mpg1. You can easily convert this to mp4 with a free media converter e.g. Mobile Media Converter, but you may have to change the extension of the original file to something recognisable (e.g. mpg) for the conversion program to accept it. (6) the remote is reasonable but you sometimes have to press a button more than once before the machine obeys. Verdict: for the price, highly functional.
W**.
Very good but wouldn't pay extra £5 for WiFi.
A very good terrestrial & satellite receiver. No idea what the WiFi does that is useful. Records well to a USB drive, but only current and next programme on satellite, whilst up to a week in advance for the terrestrial channels. Files can be played on a PC and even converted to MP4 for playback on most devices. Great value for money.
W**P
Could have been really good
I bought this receiver to replace, eventually, my old Sony DVD/HDD recorder which is still working after 13 years but doesn`t have a High Definition tuner and, although it is possible to replace the hard drive if it fails, the same may not be true of the DVD player/recorder unit. Only Panasonic seem to selling similar units currently starting around £300 and the most desirable coming in at over £500. All that for a mere seven Freeserve HD channels. (High Definition broadcasts started in 2009 in the UK yet most channels are still only available as Standard Definition)So, if you want to receive a decent number of HD channels, you need satellite broadcasts. Having toyed with idea of using the computer as a Personal Video Recorder by way of USB tv dongles and finding that the ones I`ve tried don`t work reliably, if at all, I saw this iView unit at a reasonable price and decided to give it a try. The listing claims the unit can record to a USB stick (or an external Hard Drive) in HD from either terrestrial Freeserve or Free To Air satellite broadcasts.Good points:*The picture quality in HD is very, very good.*The recording to 32GB USB sticks by pressing REC on the remote works with a few glitches on HD. It records the broadcast transport stream as an .MTS file that you can transfer onto a computer if you wish (try that with a Panasonic recorder!)*The initial tuning in of Freeview is easy and quick and there`s a manual tuning option if needed.*For those with old tv sets and no HDMI connector there`s a SCART socket outputing CVBS, S-video, YUV or RGB signals as chosen by menu settings.You can also choose the video resolution.Disappointing points:* The PVR Configuration offers a maximum files size of 4GB. Not enough for an HD feature film broadcast from most sources so you miss the ending on a movie lasting longer than about 1 hour 33 minutes. And why a limitation on file size? Using NTFS file systems, on USB stick or hard drive, you can go way above 4GB. My previous satellite receiver from Golden Interstar (not the current model) managed to avoid these limitations.*There`s no loop-through connector for terrestrial tv. Nor an ethernet socket.*You have to purchase a USB Wi-fi dongle to access the internet. Using the one available USB socket that you use for recording. A dongle that uses the Mediatek 7601 chipset (if you can find what chipset your current dongle uses. Many manufacturers seem reluctant to divulge such information in their adverts). In the instruction booklet they say they sell it from their online shop but then fail to give you the website address. Bought mine on ebay but I haven`t managed to get it to work. There`s a menu option to configure a USB connection via DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) but I haven`t tried that yet. I presume it uses a cable plugged into the USB socket but I don`t really know. No help in the booklet.*Recording to an external hard drive sometimes worked and sometimes didn`t. Setting the device to record from the EPG didn`t work when I tried it.*A new recording erases the previous one in the same folder. Maybe I`ve missed something.*There doesn`t seem to be a manual tuning option for satellite broadcasts.*The instruction booklet is lacking technical detail. It also has no website address or e-mail address for support which the booklet seems to be offering. And certainly no real world name and address for the manufacturer/distributor.*There`s a guarantee card in the box. There`s a white space for the customer`s name on the back but the rest of the reverse of the card is black including where you need to put the serial number of the device and the date, presumably using your white pen. It also informs you that there`s a one year warranty "FROM THE DATE OF PRODUCTION". I thought it was consumer law that a warrranty should run from the date of purchase.* The remote control is slightly different to the one shown in the booklet. There`s no SAT button to change from Freeview to satellite broadcasts. You have to press ENTER then the RED ZOOM button. Would you have known that? Ididn`t. I found the answer on an internet forum.*At the back page of the instruction booklet is an appeal from whoever asking for our tolerance and promising to refund our money if we are unhappy with our purchase and asking us to not leave bad or unfair feedback. Quite bizarre.All things considered, this receiver is good value for money despite the criticisms listed above. It`s a good opportunity missed I think. If only software writers used their own applications! Or at least tested them thoroughly. I wonder why the manufacturer or distributor are so evasive.
B**R
Good value
Very nice unit easy instruction and setup
S**D
Absolute Rubbish in my Personal Opinion
What can I say about this product which is good, absolutely nothing. Have had the product for a few months and it’s been a nightmare, did everything by the book installing and seems the problem I had was turning it off, if it was left on permanently it was ok but as soon as it turned off you would lose all channels even though they would be saved. Reason for this review now is I’ve just turned on this evening and the damn thing will not reset and start up. You certainly get what you pay for and in my opinion this is Rubbish.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 month ago