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In Reply to: Re: Image quality and Directv posted by SamM on May 28, 2002 at 07:50:29:
The images are blurry and lacking detail especially images in the background. Faces can end up looking like a blur of pink. No artifacts to speak of. At first thought it might be caused from strecthing the picture out to fill the whole screen but putting the set in 4:3 mode almost no differnece.The cable is only about a meter long. Now I must state that channels like HBO do not have the same degree of fuzziness but it is still there.
I had thought that changing the cable from composite to s-video would help but this was not the case. I also used the s-video cable on the dvd to see if it was a cable issue but the dvd looked just fine.
Follow Ups:
It's not your satellite box, it's not your cables....it's Directv's fault. On many channels, but not all, excessive compression is used. As more and more channels are added, bandwidth becomes a more precious commodity. I'm told that Echostar is somewhat better in this regard.
Also, some channels use filters to make certain personalities look less aged. CBS and NBC use this on their national news broadcasts so that Dan Rather and Tom Brogaw look a little smoother, less wrinkled... really! Look for yourself and you'll see when they switch from the studio to a live field report.
Premium channels like HBO, etc. use little or none. Why? Because you're paying extra for them and they know viewers will be more critical.
What to do? Complain, and keep complaining.
I wonder.....what would get more results:
1) Complaining to DirecTv about their compression ?
- or -
2) Complaining to my Iguana for crapping on the carpet ?
Either way, I bet the results are the same....sh!ty picture, sh!ty carpet.
Sorry, I just had to vent....
don't be coy, tell us the make and model of the directv receiver
and the cables.
did you ground the feed coax as per instructions?
did you install the dish or did some bozo do it for "free"
what is your average signal strength (this has nothing to do with image quality, I just want to know)
most likely: the NEC 42" is a very high quality monitor, and it shows that the source being broadcast by HGTV is crap.not kidding.
Well at the moment all my equipment is stuffed in the bedroom with six tons of furniture while I anm getting my floors refinished so I can't get the model number. It is a Hughes and it is several yaers old. Since one of the boys gave it to me for christmas I can assume it is on the 'economical' side. :)Grounding? I must be a bad boy cause I was the bozo who did the free installation. I will look into how to ground the cable.
Signal strengh is in the high 90's
Cable is one of the $40 monster cables.
sounding more like an HGTV issue... I believe Hughes makes most of the innerts for directtv units anyway...It is either the quality of the broadcast or the receiver... I'm in San Diego and the image quality i get from HGTV is comparable to CNN and Headline News... not the best, but still pretty good! best is the PPV and HBO channels... Worst, is my local feed of Fox Channel 6... they have other issues.
SamM
P.S. grounding of the dish would potentially cause a ground-loop, but if you are not grounding the dish, then i can guarantee that is not the issue.... plus you are using S-Video and not modulating the channels from Coax, right? that means you should experience simmilar interference from any channel from the dish if it were a ground-loop problem.
Hummmmmmm... I was looking at HGTV also and don't seems to have the same fuzzies.... what part of the country do you live in and also you may want to ask DirecTV what transponder HGTV is on and check other channels on the same transponder to see if you get similar results...I live in Southern California and HGTV comes in fine.... i supposed it could be the tuner/decoder in your receiver also. What make/mdeol of reciever do you have?
Sam
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