Sharp TU

In the race to bring a Freeview HD tuner to market, Humax was first to cross the finishing line, with the rather wonderful HD-FOX T2. Suffering terrible jogger’s nipple in a bid to take second and third place are Sharp’s offerings, the diabolically monikered TU-T2 and TU-T2HR32.

The TU-T2HR32 (shown above) is the higher-end model, seeking to outdo the single-tuner, memory-free HD-FOX T2 by offering a 320GB hard drive and dual tuners. This means you can record two programmes while watching another one that you’ve recorded previously, for example.

Like the HD-FOX T2, the TU-T2HR32 will also upscale standard-definition programmes to 1080p, offer a USB socket for extra storage, and sport an Ethernet port for future access to services such as iPlayer, 4oD and ITV Player. We only hope its user interface and eight-day electronic programme guide can match the HD-FOX T2’s super-slick offerings.

The TU-T2 (above, looking very familiar) has a single tuner and lacks its big brother’s internal storage, so it can’t record, but is otherwise the same HD goodness, offering Dolby Digital Plus surround sound via HDMI or the optical digital output.

Sharp’s also announced the TU-T1UR Freeview+ tuner (that’s it up there), which doesn’t offer HD channels but can record to three front-mounted USB ports, rather like the Digital Vision GiGo

Update: The TU-T1UR will be available in May for £100, the TU-T2 in April for £180 — the same as the comparable Humax T2 — and the recording TU-T2HR32 in May for £290.

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Sharp TU

It may be sooner than you want to think about it, but Christmas is coming. Before you know it you’ll be tucking into turkey, nursing hangovers and engaging in traditional arguments — like what to watch during the peak TV viewing season. With so many channels to choose from on Freeview, keeping all the family happy is going to be more difficult than finding a present on Christmas Eve.

Sharp’s new TU-R160H digital recorder could offer a solution. The company’s first hard-drive recorder is fitted with dual digital TV tuners, which means you can watch one Freeview channel while you record another. So you can sit through a family film without worrying about missing the football highlights on the other side. However, unlike some competing products, the TU-R160H doesn’t let you record two channels at once. Sharp says it will offer this feature in a second-generation model that should go on sale in December or January.

Recordings are stored on a 160GB hard drive that offers up to 80 hours of recording capacity — handy if annual visits to various relatives are keeping you away from the box. Making recordings is as simple as selecting a programme from the eight-day electronic programme guide, pushing a button and leaving the rest to technology.

The hard-drive nature of the device supports various time-slip functions such as pausing live TV and chasing playback — watching the start of a programme before it has finished recording. Another useful feature, not always present in PVRs, is a picture-in-picture (PIP) system that lets you view a second channel (without sound) via a small display on the main picture. You can also record your programmes with subtitles.

The TU-R160H features a comparatively low power consumption rate of 0.5W when in standby. Noise pollution has also been cut by eliminating the internal cooling fan. This should do away with the background hum that usually accompanies these devices.

The TU-R160H will be available this month priced at £230 and we’ll be reviewing it soon. -RA

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