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Hardware Support Discussions related to using various hardware setups with SageTV products. Anything relating to capture cards, remotes, infrared receivers/transmitters, system compatibility or other hardware related problems or suggestions should be posted here. |
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#1
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Moving to HD - Let's talk
I plan to buy an HD tuner for my HTPC..Probably the HDHomerun...
So, i want to better understand what requirements this will drive in my HTPC.. 1) Let's talk storage... today, I have (2) 250GB SATA 3 drives in RAID (internal)...I also have 2 external drives (1) 250 GB and (1) 160GB. my recording today is done using the "Great" setting, i.e., 2GB/hr. what is the equivalent XXGB/hr in HD? And how much more storage should I count on adding? (I know its dependant on how much HD vs non HD reording I do.) But let's say I need to add maybe 2 TB of storage. How is the best way to add a large amount of storage? My HTPC case only has room for 3 internal drives.... But, I do have more sata ports inside, just no more room... 750GB drives are expensive..And I haven't seen 1TB internal drives yet. But will the larger internal drives create the need for a bigger power supply? currently I have a 450W PS. And will bigger PS and drives create more heat, thus requiring more fans? Another option for storage could be external...I have about 10 USB 2.0 ports and 3 firewire ports. I could certainly hang large drives from these. Even though the external drives tend to be a little noisey for me. But the bigger question for external drives is can the USB 2.0 bus sufficiently handle HD? My external drives today handle SD without a problem. I am worried that the USB bus might not be able to put all the HD data through the bus. So, bottomline, what are the best options for adding large amounts of storage that can handle HD content? 2) Processor... I have a AMD venice core 3200 + (not overclocked)... Is this fast enough for HD? if not, what is? would overclocking help? Dual core , quad core, single core? Also, I have 2 MVP's and since they are not HD, yet (Still waiting patiently Sage...hint, hint)... The HD content will need to be transcoded down. This needs to be considered in processor requirements. 3) Graphics card ... Nvidia 6200TC ...cheap card, but with component out. can this handle HD output well, or should I expect to go to something like the Nvidia 6600? 4) Memory.... 1GB (2 x 512MB sticks)...Does HD drive any more memory requirements? I can easily add 2 sticks of 512MB or replace and add 1GB sticks... 5) Burning DVD with HD....Today I save shows to DVD, when I want to create HD space. I can get (3) 1 hour shows (without commercials) on a DVD. What happens when these are HD shows? will I need a different DVD drive for burning and playing? And then the MVP question arises again. With V6, I can watch homemade DVD's from my HTPC DVD drive onto my MVP's..If I change these to HD DVD drives and play HD content, how will Sage and the MVP handle it? 6) software...I use VideoRedo a lot...will it handle HD well? 7) customizations... I love comskip...how well does it work with HD content? Probably many other things I didn't think of..please feel free to add any other requirments that HD might drive. I would love comments on any or all of the stuff above. As always, thanks for the discussion... Gary Ellis Last edited by garyellis; 12-30-2006 at 07:49 AM. |
#2
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There is no bitrate setting for HD, the stream is recorded right to the disk. Bitrates are ~15Mbs + or -. I have one 500 Gig drive dedicated to recordings. 500 Gigs is fine for me with around 50 Favorites...most of them HD. My SD is set to record at DVD Standard.
For playback, A 3200+ is fine, I have a 3000+. I don't transcode though. I'd say a 6600GT is the minnimum...I know it handles HD up to 1920x1080 with FSE. You also get most of the PureVideo features supported. 1 Gig of RAM works fine for me. P |
#3
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I'm seeing around 6-8 GB/hour for HD recording. How much storage you need depends entirely on your recording and viewing habits. If you record, say, 20 hours a week (3 hrs/day), then 200 GB should be plenty for a week's worth of TV, assuming you delete everything after you watch it. On the other hand if you're a packrat who archives everything, then no amount of storage is enough. I have about 1100 GB in my Sage server and it's currently about 60% full with about 150 hours of recorded TV (some of it SD). So an additional 2 TB sounds like overkill to me, but again, it all depends on how you plan to use it.
For the same RPM, bigger disks don't draw any more power or generate any more heat than smaller disks; they just have more bits per platter. But obviously the more drives you have in the box, the more power you're going to need and the more heat you're going to generate. (Heat = spent power.) USB 2.0 has plenty of bandwidth for HD. 480 Mbps translates to over 200 GB/hr, enough for at least 20 simultaneous HD streams. I personally have four USB HD tuners running off the same controller without issues.
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-- Greg |
#4
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When it comes to storage I'd go down the NAS road. NASLite+ works fantastic on really old/slow hardware and the software is cheap. See www.serverelements.com.
Tom
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Sage Server: 8th gen Intel based system w/32GB RAM running Ubuntu Linux, HDHomeRun Prime with cable card for recording. Runs headless. Accessed via RD when necessary. Four HD-300 Extenders. |
#5
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One of the great features is they're expandable with their X-RAID system, you can put one drive in initially (say a 750GB), and then add more as your needs/budget dictate. I've got an X6 and started with a 500GB drive. I just recently added a second which made it redundant. Just poped the drive in, powered it up, and a few hours later is was up. The other great advantage (and this is true of any NAS) is that it easilly allows placement of the storage in a remote location where the heat and noise is not a problem. Not that the ReadyNAS is loud, but it is audible and that would be a problem in my HT. Quote:
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Another option that some have done, is to author them as HD DVDs. They'd play in HD DVD players, but not in Sage then. But to answer the question that I think you're asking, no you can put HD files on a DVD, and no you don't need an HD DVD drive to play them. Quote:
However I do know that Sage can't handle HD DVDs. Quote:
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#6
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I can also vouch for Naslite, V2 these days.
My case can hold up to 5 drives. When I went to that number, heat and noise became a problem and there was no more room. So I setup a Naslite server on an old PentiumII pc, added a 3ware raid card, moved my disks in and added some more disks. Result, 3TB of almost full storage!
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Windows 10 64bit - Server: C2D, 6Gb RAM, 1xSamsung 840 Pro 128Gb, Seagate Archive HD 8TB - 2 x WD Green 1TB HDs for Recordings, PVR-USB2,Cinergy 2400i DVB-T, 2xTT DVB-S2 tuners, FireDTV S2 3 x HD300s |
#7
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Great discussion so far.....
Greatly appreciated.... Thanks... And Happy New Year.. Gary Ellis |
#8
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if you are going to alot hard drives in this setup i would go to a rack mount setup as a small case isn't going to have enough cooling in it..
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