


Have BT definitely said you are required to return the failed box. That of course meant I then had to watch up content from that box before finally being all on the new YouView box. swap it over with the courier) so limped on with a failing box for a while with new recordings all going to a non YouView box before arranging the exchange date. I had to return the failed box at the point the new one arrived (i.e. When I've had such a failure it was a real pain and took some time to work through what was available via on demand (and for how long), what I most wanted not to lose and hence watch up first etc. The newer Humax T2xxx boxes seem much more reliable (and faster) so I hope your replacement is one of those and not another T1xxx. Humax have very clearly stated failure rates are within industry norms but personal experience and what one sees on the forum and elsewhere would suggest otherwise. I'm guessing the failed box is a Humax T1000 box. It's your call.Ah, if some of the recordings are from internet channels that adds an extra level of complexity to watching up the content (as you have explained) and moving from a failing/failed box to a new one. Watch the most popular free-to-air channels as well as the channels in your packageĬonnect to your broadband hub over wi-fi, or use the 1.5m ethernet cable we'll send out with the box. This should keep things less distracting and more cinematice when you want to turn the lights down.Īccess apps such as BBC iPlayer, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Britbox The unit has no front, digital display, with only a single LED on the front to indicate its on/off state. Importantly, it's much smaller than its YouView predecessor – less old-school VCR-sized and much easier to fit into a variety of tighter spaces.
Bt youview box recording pro#
The BT TV Box Pro reminds us a lot of the Sky Q set-top box, with its low profile and fingerprint-attractive dark plastic sheen. You can record up to two programmes at once and also pause and rewind live shows. With up to 600 hours of space to record your favourite shows, movies and sporting events. You won't run out of space fast on the BT TV Box Pro. And this is where subscription TV services still have the edge in our opinion. A Roku or Apple TV can play content from all sorts of services, but if you want to record something showing now to watch later, you're stuffed. That's where the BT TV Box Pro nicely brings together the old and new. And let's not forget, if you're not watching your favourite sport live, you're going to figure out a way of watching it later (and hopefully avoiding spoilers in the meantime). Record up to 600 hours of live movies and TVĪlthough there is a bit of an exodus towards content-on-demand (think Netflix), where you fire up your box and spend the next hour or so choosing something to watch, lots of households still watch live TV, especially during family time.

Bt youview box recording install#
If you need those, you can book a BT engineer to install the aerial for you – sadly, it's not something you can do yourself, but it's nice that the option is there. However, BT has still included an aerial socket on the box, because there are a few Freeview channels you can't yet stream over the internet.

You won't need an aerial for almost all your regular terrestrial channels, from BBC1 to Dave. The BT TV Box Pro has in interesting, mixed take on providing live TV channels. You'll be able to keep all your subscriptions in one place, and all your channels in the same box.
Bt youview box recording download#
That means you'll be able to download your own apps onto the box – BBC iPlayer, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Britbox and many more. Those features will be great for watching BT Sport Ultimate, which broadcasts its sports events in glorious 4K. No, the box acts much more like a Roku, or Apple TV designed to work in harmony with your BT TV subscription. And the new features found on the BT TV Box Pro aren't just limited to high-fidelity picture and sound – though, 4K, HDR and Dolby Atmos sound are all present and correct. This is where BT's previous YouView boxes struggled: Having the latest features. And although there was even a 4K version on its top-end TV packages, it was tailing behind competitors, with both Sky and Virgin Media having offered feature-laden 4K boxes for quite some time now. Up until recently, BT TV deals came with the somewhat creaking YouView and YouView+ set-top boxes. BT TV Box Pro BT has replaced all of its set-top boxes with a brand new model
