Freesat Freeview Euro Tv Sky The best kit, The best programmes
Comag SL30 HDMI USB
November 2010
Want to see more?
Visit Wotsat.com for daily news, reviews and updates from the world of digital TV, or join our forums.
n www.comag-ag.co.uk n £50 (approx)
Comag SL30 HDMI USB The Opposition Digiquest 6630+USB n No HDMI or EPG – but a card reader readies this receiver for pay-TV. ‘Unofficial’ firmware restores the EPG and adds USB recording
Despite its small size, this free-to-air receiver can’t be powered directly from a campingfriendly low-voltage DC source. You can record TV and radio programmes and timeshift using a rear-connected USB storage device. Also unusual at this price is the HDMI port; however, a Scart socket is provided as an analogue alternative. No UHF modulator is fitted.
LED and the bare minimum of controls – channel up/ down and standby – meaning that the handset is practically essential. The latter sports a vast array of buttons for PVR functionality, channel selection, menu control, teletext, subtitles, radio mode and much more. The receiver’s internal construction is neat, though it can get quite warm in use.
Build and connectivity
The second option of the main menu covers installation. After selecting the satellite(s) available to you in a list – the preset 44-strong list can be appended to or edited – the choice is made between fixed and motorised dish. If you’re using the latter, the next menu (antenna setup) makes provision for USALS or DiSEqC 1.2 configuration, such as limit setting and satellite positions. Fixed-dish
Also on the rear panel you’ll find the LNB input and loopthrough output, which are perhaps a little too close together for comfort. An HDMI output (there’s no upscaling) is accompanied by a composite-only Scart. The USB port can be used for firmware upgrades as well as recording. There’s only space for a single power
Setup
Interface
Technomate TM-3500 D+ USB PVR n Also has PVR and media playback capabilities via USB plus a Multicam card reader and blind search. Good pictures and audio but around £10 more expensive
USB recording, media playback and HDMI characterise this budget-conscious receiver
Multi-sat viewers are well catered for with full DiSEqC and USALS support. There’s no blind search but you can scan individual transponders
Populated by DVB data, the EPG is basic but usable with an eight-event timer, enabling you to schedule channel changes and recordings
You can record to external HDDs and flash drives and, if both are on the same transponder, record two channels at the same time
Test satellite serviceable EPG can program the eight-event timer to instigate a USB recording or a simple channel change. Other features include a sleep timer, teletext, subtitles and soundtrack selection, video format and a TV/radio mode button. There’s also a nine-channel, multi-picture thumbnail feature.
PVR and multimedia Timeshifting, which needs to be turned on via a menu, requires an HDD – solid-state drives are not fast enough. Yet even with one of these slower devices you can play any recording (timed or manually-invoked) that’s in progress – you’ll find it, with any others, in the ‘record manager’ menu. We also discovered that you can simultaneously watch and record two different channels, although both must be on the same transponder. JPEG or BMP still images, MPEG video files and MP3 tracks will play too, although other content like DivX is ignored. You also get three games to play – Tetris, Othello and Sudoku. users, meanwhile, can specify a DiSEqC 1.0 port. Signal strength and quality bars indicate how the currently selected transponder is being received. A 12V switch item is redundant, given that there’s no output. ‘Single satellite search’ does as it says; similarly, the multi-satellite search function available to DiSEqC systems will visit several satellites in one go. In both cases either FTA or all channels can be found, which is more useful than it seems because some channels are improperly ‘flagged’. You can also scan for radio and/or TV. Blind-scan isn’t an option; it’s possible, though, to select an individual transponder and search that. No control over PIDs or FEC is, alas, offered. The transponder list can be edited or added to; parameters here are restricted to frequency, polarity and symbol rate. Other menu options look after the video-output settings, parental locks, clock, favourites (eight lists) and channel management. From here, channels can be deleted, locked, moved and skipped. They can also be sorted alphabetically or according to encryption status, and satellite-specific lists selected. This is just as well because the ‘normal’ channel list, accessed with the ‘enter’ button, gives you no such flexibility. At best, multi-sat viewers can toggle between the current satellite and all channels. Other menus look after recording functions, such as drive formatting and timeshift buffer duration.
Basic use Compensating for the standard channel list’s inflexibility is the ‘find’ button, which homes in on a channel if one or more letters of its name are entered. The basic but
Performance Pictures via Scart are disappointing. Thanks to the composite-only connection, they’re somewhat fuzzy and spoilt by more noise than is usual. But audio quality is excellent. Fortunately, HDMI redresses the balance with a noticeably superior performance. Colours and greyscale are true to life and, within the restrictions of SD broadcasting, details are pleasingly resolved. Searches and channel-changing are both speedy, and menus are responsive too. However, sensitivity was found a bit wanting – transponders on some satellites were missed. Reception of Hot Bird and both key Astra clusters was reliable, though. We managed to run out of memory during a multi-satellite scan. Although this receiver may boast DiSEqC capabilities, chances are that it will be partnered with a fixed dish in a budget setup and so this need not be an issue. Another problem we encountered relates to timed USB recordings. On seemingly random occasions the recording was not made – insufficient USB capacity was not the cause. Manually invoked recordings were always successful n Martin Pipe
Verdict It’s difficult not to like this receiver. It marries a well-balanced range of features to a performance that, certainly via HDMI, is indistinguishable from that of far more expensive equipment. The recording facilities are worthwhile, but we hope that the erratic timer is fixed by a firmware update.
Tech Data FTA scan, Astra 1: 5m 10s 0
10 mins
FTA scan, Hot Bird: 4m 27s 0
10 mins
Full scan, Astra 1: 5m 18 0
10 mins
Full scan, Hot Bird: 4m 44s 0
10 mins
Common interface supports: N/A Power consumption: In use, 10W, in standby <1W
Features No LNB inputs: 1 (extended IF, 22kHz) LNB loopthrough: Yes DiSEqC: 1.0/1.1/1.2/USALS No. channels: 4,000 TV/radio Selectable FEC: No Symbol rate: 1000-45000 Blind search: No Linux: No CAM: None Common interface: None Teletext: DVB decoded EPG support: Now-and-next, 7-day Timer: 8-event Hard drive: Via USB UHF modulator tuning: N/A Software upgrade: Via USB Data ports: USB Video out: TV Scart (composite), HDMI Audio out: None (Dolby Digital and PCM audio via HDMI)
Ratings PLUS
n Decent AV performance via
HDMI
n Flexible recording n Fairly user-friendly
Minus
n No RGB output via Scart n Timed recording proved less
than reliable
Captive mains cable
LNB input
LNB loopthrough output
USB port
Scart
HDMI port
n Restricted searching options
Build Setup Searching Navigation Performance Features Value
hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh hhhhhhhhhh
76%