MikeSh
Well-Known Member
As BH says - looks like rusty water pooling.what's that orange stuff on the main board, around the RF IN daughter-board?
Your hand picture just confirms it.
As BH says - looks like rusty water pooling.what's that orange stuff on the main board, around the RF IN daughter-board?
Really? I can see significant signs of corrosion looking at them.no sign of water damage on the outside, i.e. the RF connectors, but…
Definitely. There's dust, rust and general filth all over the board. This has been getting wet for quite a long time I would say. I'm surprised it's stayed working this long.what's that orange stuff on the main board, around the RF IN daughter-board? And doesn't that daughter-board look like it's full of this orange stuff.
Rust?
Really? I can see significant signs of corrosion looking at them.
Definitely. There's dust, rust and general filth all over the board. This has been getting wet for quite a long time I would say. I'm surprised it's stayed working this long.
Time to replace that co-ax and make sure it's water-tight at the top before you kill anything else.
If you're that close to the signal threshold that it makes a significant difference, then you need an amplifier at the top end in the first place.The slight irritation of loss of signal, reflections etc, with an adaptor/plate
If you're that close to the signal threshold that it makes a significant difference, then you need an amplifier at the top end in the first place.
There's an issue with that: HD-FOX can only receive one mux at a time, and still has to pass through the signal, so it can't be exactly the same module as either of the two modules in the HDR-FOX (unless they have over-engineered it, but that would impact the bill of materials and therefore the bottom line). In the HDR-FOX, one module has to be configured to receive and daisy-chain, and the other has to be configured to daisy-chain and output.I wonder if a broken eBay HD-Fox T2 would be a source of the same tuner module?
If the aerial is as old as the cable I'd consider getting him to replace that, and maybe the mast & brackets too while he's at it. (It's quite possible he may find the aerial is in too poor condition to rewire anyway.)I'll certainly ask my aerial chap about the type of cable (foam); I don't fancy mucking about on our moss-covered roof without a proper roof ladder (or even with one).
Bang on. Looking more closely (but without actually opening it up), it seems that the tuner module in the HD has both antenna connectors. I haven't seen the revised HDR with similar vertically aligned connectors; perhaps it has a dualled version of the HD module that can tune two channels at once. Obviously the 2 demodulators give the ability to pull programmes from 2 muxes at once.There's an issue with that: HD-FOX can only receive one mux at a time, and still has to pass through the signal, so it can't be exactly the same module as either of the two modules in the HDR-FOX (unless they have over-engineered it, but that would impact the bill of materials and therefore the bottom line). In the HDR-FOX, one module has to be configured to receive and daisy-chain, and the other has to be configured to daisy-chain and output.
If the aerial is as old as the cable I'd consider getting him to replace that, and maybe the mast & brackets too while he's at it. (It's quite possible he may find the aerial is in too poor condition to rewire anyway.)
They don't last forever and it might save another visit in a few years time.
And go for a log periodic, not someI would still be inclined to renew the aerial, as the man-up-a-ladder is already paid for.