Over the years, I have tried with different operating systems (Windows 3.1, 98, 2000,
XP, Vista), newer hardware, different hardware brands (WinTV, Pinnacle, Aver), newer
interfaces (PCI, USB) but I was never successful in getting a stable working setup.
At one point, it looked like I was having a curse on getting a TV Tuner working on
my PC. In all cases my hardware exceeded the manufacturer's minimum required specification.
So in the last two years, I have put TV Tuner in my list of technology "hypes" whose
times hasn't arrived yet.
With
this background I tried again and I bought a Pinnacle
Hybrid TV Tuner Kit (USB) for Vista during my Singapore trip. The minimum specification
said Vista Home Premium/Ultimate (32bit) and it was Certified for Vista, this meant
they have drivers for Vista. When I came back to my office, tried to install it in
my Windows
Vista x64 Enterprise OS machine with 8GB RAM. I got the beta
driver for Vista x64 from Pinnacle
Support site, the card got installed but there was no Media Application to play
the TV.
Windows Vista Enterprise x64 to Ultimate x64
After some search, I realized that I needed either Vista Home Premium or
Ultimate because only those two Vista Editions include Windows Media Center that was
needed to play the TV signal from Pinnacle tuner. I thought this should be simple,
since Vista allows easy
upgrade between editions, but it turns out officially you cannot upgrade Vista
Enterprise to anything else. I found a hack
here to do it, by tricking the setup to treat Enterprise as Business edition.
Instead, I decided to reinstall Windows Vista and I did that and got Windows Vista
x64 Ultimate working.
Pinnacle
x64 Driver from Windows Update
When I now connected the TV Tuner USB Device, Windows Update detected the
device, installed the correct driver for Pinnacle PCTV 330e and got initialised. I
followed the instructions given in Pinnacle manual, connected the IR Blaster (this
sticks in front of your set-top box and replays the IR instructions of set-top box
remote) to IR Receiver and then the IR Receiver to a free USB port.
(IR Receiver / Remote sensor receives the signal from the Media Center remote
control and relays it to the Media Center PC. When you plug the IR control cable into
the remote sensor and the set-top box, then the remote sensor also relays the signal
from the PC to the set-top box)
Windows Media Center shows only TV Tuner as Signal source
I connected the Tata Sky DTH satellite set-top box composite video/audio
RCA jacks to Pinnacle Tuner. I ran Windows Media Center software, unfortunately it
detected only the TV Tuner as an input source and refused to recognize the Satellite
(Composite) as an available input source. Checking the documentation
for setting a set-top box from Microsoft site I ensured I had the IR blaster connected
still it didn't detect my composite video signal - for a strange
reasoning best known only to Microsoft, Media Center doesn't enable input sources
other than TV Tuner unless it detects the IR blaster. But in my case even with IR
Blaster installed correctly, it didn't show up.
I tried the TV Tuner in two different Vista 32bit (x86) machines:
-
Dell
Vostro
with 4GB RAM where I had the same problem
of not being able to select composite signal source (Dell support said they don't
support Media Center with Vostro series)
-
Lenovo Desktop (with 1GB RAM) where it worked perfect.
Windows Media Center on first start, automatically detected the IR Blaster (allowed
me to even control the Tata Sky set-top box successfully)
It looks like Windows Media Center/Pinnacle Hybrid tuner doesn't support more than
1GB RAM for Satellite input.
I wrote to Pinnacle Support asking them whether the product is supported in Vista
x64. First they said this is a MCE question so you should write to Microsoft. Filling
a case with Microsoft PSS they refused to take it - it is a how-to question and also
it is a device capability issue. Writing back to Pinnacle, they promptly replied that
there product is not supported in Vista x64 - "The tuner kit for
Windows Media Center will only work on a 32 bit version. There is no update for a
64 bit version yet. We are sorry for any inconvenience the product has brought your". This
was surprising as Windows Update has a driver for the product and Pinnacle themselves
have a beta driver.
So it was time to ditch Windows Media Center and do it on our own. After some research
I found out Nero has a TV Tuner Player
software - I am big fan and loyal user of Nero for years. So downloaded the trial
of Nero 8 and after few configuration steps I got the device working.

Nero 8.0 configuration with Satellite Signal and Pinnacle Hybrid Tuner
The step to configure involves the following four steps:
Step 1: Launch Nero MediaHome software and then the "TV Wizard"
Step 2: "Pinnacle 330e/880e Device" as Video Device (you will see
two entries, the other one is for TV Tuner Signal) and "Composite"
as Video Input

Step 3: Launch Nero Home, select Video in Video and TV applet
Step 4: Scroll down and select Composite as the video to play
Finally, you will see this player with signal from Tata Sky working fine:

Note: If you are planning a TV Tuner card for Vista x64, before you buy it please
visit the Microsoft
HCL site to ensure you buy a hardware that is certified for x64.