4DTV
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2011) |

4DTV is a proprietary broadcasting standard and technology for digital cable broadcasting and C-band/Ku-band satellite dishes from
History
4DTV technology was originally developed in 1997 (the same year that DigiCipher was developed) by
On August 24, 2016, at 9:18 AM EST, Headend In The Sky (the provider for 4DTV/DigiCipher II programming) transitioned to DVB-S2 (MPEG-2/256 QAM), meaning that support for 4DTV ended on that date.[1]
Technical specifications
Usage
4DTV is designed for C-band/Ku-band based satellite dishes (both TVRO/direct-broadcast) in conjunction with the DigiCipher II system (for digital standard definition/high definition signals) and the VideoCipher II system (for analog signals). It is also used on Canada's Shaw Direct (previously known as Star Choice) until 2017 when standard definition broadcasting ended in favour of HDTV exclusively, making the receivers obsolete.
Receiver/Decoders
4DTV receivers were designed to receive analog NTSC (except the DSR-905) in the clear or VideoCipherII channels and feeds, as well as digital Digicipher 2 channels as a TVRO satellite system on both C and Ku band-powered satellite dishes.
Four models are available, either new or refurbished:
- DSR-920 (discontinued as of 2003)
- DSR-921 (discontinued as of 2003)
- DSR-922 (made available in Fall 2000, discontinued)[1][2][3]
- DSR-905 (designed to work with analog 4DTV receivers and it can only receive DigiCipher II channels) (discontinued)
High definition access
The HDD-200 is a peripheral for 4DTV, it is used to access high definition channels via the Mult-Media Access Port. This peripheral is no longer in production.
Programming providers
In the United States,
Due to the removal of 4DTV/DigiCipher II channels on August 24, 2016, there are no more programming providers for the 4DTV in the United States and Canada. However, Shaw Direct still offers DigiCipher II programming in Canada, but not HITS programming.
Advantages
The 4DTV makes use of first-generation digital master feeds on several satellites and hundreds of channels. Therefore, a high quality signal is received, compared to other programming options that are typically compressed and re-uplinked. Being a C-band system, the 4DTV has the advantage of signal stability, great satellite footprint and no rainfade. This is a problem with services such as Dish Network and DirecTV satellite providers since they re-uplink on Ku and Ka bands.
Disadvantages
The master feeds for the many channels available can be scattered amongst multiple satellites. The actuator must slowly rotate the large dish into the desired satellite's signal path, and then a further short delay for signal acquisition and lock. This procedure makes rapid "channel surfing" impossible outside the HITS provided channels.
References
- ^ "DSR922 4DTV now available [sic]". Google Groups - rec.video.satellite.tvro. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
- ^ "2000 Satellite News". BUD & 4DTV Info (bigdish.info). Retrieved 2009-08-28.
- ^ "DSR 922 Operator's Guide". General Instrument: Publication #468478-001, Rev B. General Instrument Corp. 2000.