There is another thread I responded to where the problem was a black screen. The problem, not the cable card or the tuner, it was network set-up in Vista.
Check your network set-up, your firewall, if you wifi that could be the problem depending on the your firewall and what you're running. Turn off all firewalls (you can unplug the internet for the test) and make sure you only have the ATI Tuners in Network Devices and see what happens.
You should see both tuners, you should be able to click on them and it should open a browser window and there should be several tabs. If you tuners have not been paired with the cable cards, that will have to be done before you can see anything.
Other things to check is your videocard set-up and desktop set-up. How are your display devices connected and are they HDCP. You cannot run a cloned desktop with cablecard, it will have to be extended.
You should go to the Media Center Integrators Podcast and listen to Dr. Flick's three programs on cablecards: set-up diagnosis and fixes.
John
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Hengdo:if your SNR value is lower than 30, it means your signal level is very weak. If I have to guess what comcast had measured @ -4dBmV, I'll say, that was an analog channel. The optimal SNR value should be 30 and above. you may want to amplify your signal before your splitter.
If the problem is signal level, make the cable company do a full spectrum scan (those little devices cost several thousand dollars and the reading off of Media Center are way off) and they will supply an amp if necessary for your signal and well as adjusting tilt if the problem is between low and high end channels. Why waste your own money and time when they provide the service?
I had a similar issue. The installer came back the next day, and we reran the setup, this time when he called the home office he asked for a particular guy - he said he was the cablecard guru. 5 minutes later everything worked - was even using the same cablecards.
He said that they don't handle many cablecards, and many of the operators don't know how to properly set them up. So I think that a lot of the problems that people are having, might actually be configuration errors at the cable company.
I'm with insight, and they don't use SDV, so life is sweet with around 40-50 HD channels.
yea im running two cable card and two ATSC tuners and it took me about 10 hours with comcast and then they finally got it. you have to tell them to enter all the numbers that media center gives you.
because when they register the cable card tuner (not the Computer) there is an extra step they they don't normally fill out when registering cable card tvs.
Existentialism0:Wow, I will be buying a similar setup soon. Two ATI Cable Card Tuners with a HP box. I have no idea what half of the stuff in here means. Kind of scary, giving me doubts as to whether I should bother. I figured I'd just plug everything in, and run through the MC setup, this post makes it sound like rocket science.
It's not rocket science, but it is RF science. The lucky thing is that's something that the cable company is supposed to know everything about. Signal level and how the signal gets to your tuner is very important and it should all be done by the cable company and use their parts so that all the signals work with their system. They have the tools to properly measure the full spectrum and the right splitters (two way) and amps (with back feed channel) so they should do it and you shouldn't pay any money buying stuff from Radio Shack or Amazon.
Then the next issue is setting up the computer properly. The biggest problem is usually firewalls and scanning software (virsus and system fixes). The tuners work like network devices but show up on USB connectors and they have to have clear access so the Windows firewall needs to be turned off for connections 2 & 3 for the tuners. If you use other programs (Norton or McAfee) you'll need to configure them with trusted networks and trusted full access programs (all the MS ehome programs).
Then because of the DRM you have to have a full HDCP signal path from the tuner to the display. If you have multiple displays, they have to be an extended desktop because DRM won't let you play on a cloned desktop (you've made an extra copy in that mode).
Those are the most common problems, the biggest one is the cable company and the problem there is many systems just don't have people that have installed cablecards and don't know the proper set-up.
There have been several people that have had the cards in upside down. They aren't keyed so if the card doesn't show as inserted, try turning it over and re-inserting it.
If the second tuner doesn't show make sure you have the latest firmware (1.17) installed since there was an issue with 1.16 where close mac addresses wouldn't assign an ip address. If each will show individually, it's usually a firmware issue or firewall issue.