ChatterBank3 mins ago
I'm Paying £52.90 Per Month for Sky+
23 Answers
it's too much for me on my own now. Is there a cheaper Freesat that still gives me the pause/rewind/record facilities? Thanks.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.That's an awful lot to pay for Sky and I suspect you may have other packages with it such as sport or films. Why dont you give Sky a ring and see if you can negotiate a better deal.....they dont like the thought of loosing customers and it could well be you do have services you dont really need and save some money......we do like Sky+ and keep with sky because of that
Dunno what channels you want but a freesat digi could be connected to your dish, and with the digi you can pause rewind etc. One off payment and that's that. You can also opt for the sky freesat service, which gives more/different channels, but I am not sure how your box works with that (like whether it would be recieve only)
In Tesco I saw a 250GB Technik Freeview recording box. It will record and pause TV as you want but obviously you will only get the available Freeview channels and not all of the Sky ones. It cost around £90 for the box and there will be not further costs after that, provided you are able to set it up yourself.
yes you can pause, fast forward, rewind and record. It also has bbc i player where you can watch something you have missed, some are free and others about £1 which gets addes to bill only when you watch something. They also have their own replay for the main channels which do not stay on there as long but are free. You can pay more and add different channels if you want. Worth a look at the BTVision web site.
Pull your card out of the box and you will be able to see the channels you will receive without subscription using your current equipment. You will loose all your pause/rewind and recording facilities but it sounds as though you know that already. You will also loose any already recorded progams too.
Regarding your Freeview v Freesat question:
Freeview is a terrestrial service, received through a conventional aerial. The channels you can receive are shown here:
http://www.freeview.co.uk/Channels
(A basic Freeview set-top box will cost you around £20)
Any satellite receiver (including your existing Sky+ box, even if you allow the subscription to expire), attached to a normal Sky dish, can receive all of these channels free of charge:
http://en.wikipedia.o...channels_at_28%C2%B0E
So you don't need to buy anything extra in order to continue seeing many TV stations.
Freesat is a service from the BBC and ITV which uses a special set-top box. It basically gives you exactly the same channels as those listed in my Wikipedia link above but adds on 'red button' interactive services, plus some text-based services.
Channel list (page 1 of 3):
http://www.freesat.co...-you-get/our-channels
A basic set-top box will cost around £30.
There's also 'Freesat from Sky' (which, confusingly, isn't the same as 'Freesat'). With that system you'll get the channels listed in my Wikipedia link, plus a few interactive services thrown in by Sky. You could use your existing Sky+ box but with a special card which Sky sells for a one-off payment of £25.
Chris
Freeview is a terrestrial service, received through a conventional aerial. The channels you can receive are shown here:
http://www.freeview.co.uk/Channels
(A basic Freeview set-top box will cost you around £20)
Any satellite receiver (including your existing Sky+ box, even if you allow the subscription to expire), attached to a normal Sky dish, can receive all of these channels free of charge:
http://en.wikipedia.o...channels_at_28%C2%B0E
So you don't need to buy anything extra in order to continue seeing many TV stations.
Freesat is a service from the BBC and ITV which uses a special set-top box. It basically gives you exactly the same channels as those listed in my Wikipedia link above but adds on 'red button' interactive services, plus some text-based services.
Channel list (page 1 of 3):
http://www.freesat.co...-you-get/our-channels
A basic set-top box will cost around £30.
There's also 'Freesat from Sky' (which, confusingly, isn't the same as 'Freesat'). With that system you'll get the channels listed in my Wikipedia link, plus a few interactive services thrown in by Sky. You could use your existing Sky+ box but with a special card which Sky sells for a one-off payment of £25.
Chris