Forum Discussion

Tregarth's avatar
Tregarth
On our wavelength
5 days ago

Transfer programs

I have an old Tivo box which has a number of TV programs / films etc saved on the internal hard disc.  How can I save these for future use when I transfer to the new 360 box?

For instance, can I copy the old programs to an external hard disc  and play back as I would with a DVD?

How can I save my old programs for future viewing, please?

Thank you,

Tregarth

3 Replies

  • Tregarth's avatar
    Tregarth
    On our wavelength

    Thank you both for your replies.  I will have to sit quietly and have a long think.

    regards,

    Tregarth

  • Roger_Gooner's avatar
    Roger_Gooner
    Alessandro Volta

    The TiVo has a SCART socket, so you can copy your programmes to a VCR or s DVD recorder as these also have SCART sockets. The resolution is SD (576i) and if the source is HD the TiVo will downscale to 576i. For best quality use a SCART cable wired for RGB and recorder that accepts RGB through its SCART input. (I'm fairly sure that the TiVo outputs RGB.)

    However you should be aware that the 360 has a wide range of Catch-Ups available from broadcaster video on demand (BVoD) apps such as BBC iPlayer and ITVX, as well as On Demand delivered by its own servers, thus making some recordings irrelevant.

  • Tavis75's avatar
    Tavis75
    Super solver

    There is no easy way to do this unless you have one of the original VM TiVo boxes that still have a SCART socket, you could then use that to feed into a suitable device or video recorder card attached to a PC (or possibly a DVD recorder that will record from a SCART input if you can find one). So obviously the output would be converted to low-def anologue and then re-digitized, so the quality would not be fantastic.

    Might be possible with a V6 with an appropriate HDMI to SCART (or other analogue connection) convertor of some sort and then doing the same thing (maybe would also required HDCP removal device to get rid of any copy protection, but not sure if that is used on recorded programs on the V6) . 

    Basically though, you're going to need some additional hardware.