Forum Discussion
So, to confirm a few items:
When I tried to run the coaxial cable straight from the Cisco box to the TV, channel 4 on the TV is the default channel I've used for years with the prior cable tv box. It's the one with the snow. Channel 3 is a pure black screen, no snow, but shows the channel number first, then goes to a floating around "No Signal" message.
Regarding what input sources are available, my Dynex TV only offers 5 choices, the ones seen in the photo here I took tonight (the show there is "Mutiny on the Bounty" on TCM). Under the prior Scientific Atlanta cable box setup, it was all coaxial cable connections. There was and is no "cable-box as the source" and I don't have a RF Modulator. The signal passed through the Magnavox recorder when it was turned off, and the input source was "TV" — meaning the Dynex was interpreting the cable box as though it was the antenna. Whenever I turned on the Magnavox, I had to switch over to "Component/AV (DVD)" to record TCM movies, which I did entirely for the benefit of my elderly mother who doesn't have cable TV. I don't think I ever tried to record anything that came under 'no recording' limitations. The system worked fine. The mystery is why the signal doesn't get to the TV directly now with a coaxial cable when it should under the "TV" input source setting, as that always was the cable TV boxes. Perhaps we can blame the new Cisco box?
Meanwhile, on trying the newest cable connection suggestions, we now have a DVD recording success!! Or at least a recording of what was permitted to be recorded.
The solution was basically gleaned from both of you guy's suggestions. Using Bruce's "Scenario-3 and 4", the HDMI cable connection is Cisco box-straight-to-TV, it works fine in the TV's "HDMI 1" input source selection. I then connected the composite cables into the Magnavox and then onward out to the TV, but it was WiderMouthOpen's note about channel selection that turned out to be the key here — not the channel 4 selection that the Dynex TV had to be set to, but instead the "channels" that could be selected on the Magnavox's remote control. Under the prior total coaxial cable connection setup using the old cable TV box, the Magnavox's "channel" also had to be on channel 4. There's a limited selection of "channels" but one of the others was "L1", meaning the composite cables coming in now from the Cisco box to the back of the Magnavox. With that selected, the signal comes in to the Magnavox and can be recorded to DVD. I tried it and it works ………………..
……………….. with the limitations now that Bruce predicted. I can record what's on PBS stations, and on Fox Sports 1 (meaning I can still program overnight rebroadcasts of local MLB baseball that I've missed during the day on Sundays), and probably other such channels, but when it comes to Turner Classic Movies, which I had been recording just fine only two weeks back under the prior cable box, now it says "Recording Error, This program is not recordable in +VR mode. E45". Same result for the EPIX 2 channel which happened to be showing "Iron Man 2" when I first got this to display a signal.
Bummer, not so much for me, but my elderly mother will be disappointed in not being able to watch old TCM broadcasts.
Well, guys, I do thank you for all the help, and I hope this exercise helps others who might have a similar problem. When a person understands better how the systems work, then the systems will eventually work when all is set up right.
I think I read the latest iterations of Digital RF signals (QAM tuners via coax) only modulate on channel 3. The black screen on channel-3 was your Cox signal but it appears the QAM tuner in your Dynex only received scrambled programming. QAM tuners only support "in-the-clear" (unscrambled) digital programs, so I guess a black screen is what it looks like. I bet if you surf channel-3 long enough, you'll find something in-the-clear.
As for your recent recording-to-DVD successes, those programs are from your local TV affiliates, such as PBS and whichever local has the broadcast rights for your MLB team. Either the locals are not scrambling their content or Cox doesn't feel those channels are monetarily worth scrambling. I'm sure Cox's decision varies from market-to-market and from time-to-time. After reading this, they'll start scrambling those channels. J/K.
I think the difference between your previous Scientific Atlanta box and the new Cisco box is the support for QAM tuners. I'm not sure how old your previous Scientific Atlanta box was, but I'll guess it was from Cox' pre-encryption days. It wasn't an issue of being "obsolete" but an issue of not supporting encryption, scrambling and copy-right protection. Cox wants to get those vulnerabilities off their networks. Why'd you turn it in?
- Rthe3rdC6 years agoNew Contributor II
Label me as "lost in the dark ages", my rhetorical question would be, "what is the purpose of DVD recorders, if not to record TV programming?" I can see how stuff on HBO or pay-per-view might be blocked, but old TCM movies?? How many people are going to skip work to watch "20 Mule Team" at 11:30 am?? My older brother uses a DVR to watch ball games sans commercials, but I imagine there is some kind of arms race going on between what he has and the program makers who make money from advertising. But I have no idea how DVRs work and have no intention of getting one if I can't transport movies out to my elderly mother's place. Is TCM so desparate for money that they want to mandate old folks to get cable TV and watch particular movies at oddball times of the day or get DVRs and learn how those work? My mom can still barely figure out her cordless landline phone.
I turned in the old Scientific Atlantic cable box because it flat out stopped working. I was alerted by Cox twice by mail starting a month or two ago that I might start to lose channels after May 7th if I didn't swap to the newer "Contour" setup, and then recently I started getting online alerts about that in popup windows, which I thought was particularly intrusive. So I called to have the new box delivered and had planned to do the swap in my own sweet time a week or two later after getting it, but then one evening only days after getting the new box, all cable TV stopped working completely, followed right after by the announcement on the screen that my cable service had been disconnected. A call to a Cox rep revealed that they had somehow activated my new Cisco 'system' (without any action prompting that from me) and that in order to watch TV again, I had to install the Cisco box right away. That's were the troubles began, because it should have worked with the way the prior coaxial cables were connected previously to my Magnavox recorder.
I figured out how to see TV by bypassing the DVD recorder with the HDMI cable, but in the email correspondence with Cox Help people on why the signal wasn't working through the DVD recorder, they ultimately suggested that I had a defective Cisco box and that I should exchange it for a different one. When that didn't help, I figured I might find some answers in this online forum, but all that I saw was years out of date on connection problems with DVD recorders. Thus my need to sign in and ask directly toward folks like you guys who know way more better on what's going on. I love no-thinkum plug & play, which this certainly was not.
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