Diamond Enthusiast


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Hi Smike 13 Welcome to Answerpool I don't know much about recording programmes by this method How are you saving these, to a computer Hard Drive, or a dedicated DVR player? If its the former then I suspect the timing is out of sync or have a peek inside the casing and see if its secure in the drive bay 4 X crosshead screws any vibration might show up as interference when you are viewing the Programme  Otherwise check that any other cables (especially the thick ribbon cable) are not draped over the hard drive casing transmitting vibrations from elsewhere. Tie a cable tie if you can? to keep this clear of the casing. I also found this thread on the Cnet forums which might have an answer within it
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| Posts: 12747 | Location: 6 miles west of Wigan UK | Registered: 06-05-02 |    |
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Diamond Enthusiast


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I believe what you are experiencing is signal scrambling. The digital signal of ON Demand movies is scrambled to prevent transfer to conventional recording devices like a VCR. I believe that regular shows on free television do not have this signal scramble. I did some searching but couldn't find anything specifically discussing this. I did find numerous articles saying that with the numerous movies that are now available that companies are scrambling the signal so that it will corrupt when put through a transfer device.
If you have premium channels, I suggest you try to record a program on a premium channel to see if the same lines appear on the tape. It's probable that the pay channels incorporate the same type of scrambling as the pay per view features.
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