Avertv Volar Max Software

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Maintaining updated Avermedia AVerTV Hybrid Volar MAX (H826) software prevents crashes and maximizes hardware and system performance. Using outdated or corrupt Avermedia AVerTV Hybrid Volar MAX (H826) drivers can cause system errors, crashes. Jan 30, 2012  Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for Avertv Hybrid Volar Max TV Tuner Kit for Windows MTVHVMXSK at Amazon.com. Read honest and unbiased product reviews from our users.

  • Mar 16, 2015  Amazon.com: AVerMedia AVerTV Volar Hybrid Q, USB TV Tuner, ATSC, Clear QAM HDTV & FM Radio, Supports Windows & Android TV 7.0 or above (H837): Computers & Accessories.
  • H.264 Recording Compression Technology The AVerMedia AVerTV Hybrid Volar Max records TV shows directly into H.264 format at 320x240 resolution for playback on your iPod player. The advanced H.264 compression technology provides higher quality video while taking up less hard drive space.
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  • Free drivers for AVerMedia AVerTV Hybrid Volar MAX (H826). Found 8 files for Windows 7, Windows 7 64-bit, Windows Vista, Windows Vista 64-bit, Windows XP Media Center, Linux, Linux x86, Linux x64. Select driver to download.

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  • AverMedia AverTVHD Volar Max

As TVs and computers continue to converge, most people are familiar with the on-demand, online services like the iTunes Store or Hulu. But you have to wait until after shows air to view them, and in some cases you have to pay to watch programs. But you can still get a digital TV signal over the air and watch shows from the major networks, and with a device like AverMedia’s AverTVHD Volar Max you can watch those shows on your Mac. The Volar Max is a USB TV tuners that works with bundled software to play and record broadcast TV on your Mac.

The hardware components of the Volar Max comprise a USB dongle that you plug into your Mac and a small 75 Ohms TV antenna. You can plug the antenna into the USB dongle to get over-the-air digital SD and HD TV broadcasts, or you can connect a coaxial cable that’s used for cable TV—but Volar Max will only play back unencrypted cable TV signals (often called ClearQAM by cable TV providers). Whether you’re using over-the-air or an unencrypted cable TV signal, your TV channel selection will be limited to local networks and broadcasts. You’re not going to get HBO, ESPN, or other pay channels.

The Volar Max’s performance with over-the-air broadcast TV depends on the signal quality in the area. When I tested the Volar Max at Macworld’s downtown San Francisco office, I was able to pick up 22 channels. With many of those channels, I experienced stuttering; sometimes the stuttering would happen once or twice in an hour, sometimes it would happen so often it made a show unwatchable. Replacing the Volar Max’s bundled antenna with my own amplified antenna didn’t help.

An AverMedia representative told me the stuttering problem was most likely caused by a weak TV signal at the Macworld office. When I tested the Volar Max at my San Francisco home (about five miles southwest of the office) with the bundled antenna, the Volar Max performed dramatically better. I didn’t experience any stuttering, and I was able to pick up 20 more channels to boot.

To watch TV on a Mac with the Volar Max, you’ll need to use the AverTV for Mac software. I tested with version 2.0.9, which you can download from AverMedia’s Website. The software lets you watch TV, record shows, play back shows you’ve recorded, and peruse the daily programming guide. Though AVerTV provides menu selections and keyboard shortcuts for the controls, you’ll most likely use the software’s Control Panel.

To watch a show, all you have to do is click a channel in the AverTV’s Program Guide. You can change channels through the Control Panel, or you can also press a number on your keyboard, and a channel guide will appear in the Live TV Window; you can then use the up arrow, down arrow, and Return keys to select a channel. You can also use the up arrow and down arrow keys while watching a show to move up or down a channel without seeing the guide.

The Volar Max has a TimeShift feature that tells the software to record the show as it’s playing. You can then pause and resume when you want, and you can also fast-forward, rewind, or skip to a section of the video by clicking or scrubbing on the Playback Seek slider bar at the bottom of the Live TV Window. TimeShift is easy to use and understand, but it’s not on all the time. You must turn it on by clicking the TimeShift button in the Control Panel.

Avermedia Volar Max

To record a show as you are watching it, you can click on the Record button in the Control Panel or press command-R. You can also schedule a recording ahead of time, and fortunately, you don’t have the keep the AverTV software open in order for the software to record as scheduled, and you can set the software to quit, shut down the computer, put the computer to sleep, or to switch to regular TV mode when a recording is done. The software can’t wake your Mac from sleep or boot your Mac if it’s shut down, however. Recorded shows appear in the Playlist section of the software, where all you have to do to watch a show is double-click it.

The biggest problem I had with the Volar Max is that the AverTV software saves video as multiplexed (muxed) MPEG-2 files. As such, there’s no export option for saving files for an iPhone, iPod, Apple TV, or any other device. That means you need to use other applications to convert the video files for your portable devices (by default, the software saves videos to your Documents folder, but you can change this in the software preferences). Fortunately, I was able to use the free HandBrake () to successfully create iPhone-compatible versions of my recorded videos. You can also use the free MPEG Streamclip to convert the files. The free VLC media player, which you need to install if you use Handbrake, can play the MPEG-2 files with sound, but if all you want to do is watch the recorded videos, you can just watch them within the AverTV software.

While there are workarounds for dealing with the MPEG-2 files, they certainly aren’t convenient. The Windows version of the product saves files in H.264 format, and AverMedia says that H.264 support is coming to the Mac version of AVerTV, but can’t say when that will be. It’s hard to justify the lack of support when there are competing products such as the Elgato EyeTV Hybrid () that offer convenient, built-in export tools.

The other quibble I have with the AverTV software is the Electronic Programming Guide (EPG). In my testing, it provided incomplete program information, showing data only for the first dozen channels in the listing. After that, everything else was blank, and updating the EPG had no effect. If programming info is missing of the show you want to record, you’ll have to set up the software manually to record. According to a AverMedia representative, the software gets its programming info from the over-the-air broadcast signal. The other issue is that it only provides guide data for one week in the future, whereas the EyeTV software (and most set-top DVRs) offer two weeks.

Avermedia Volar Max Driver

Channel Preview is a nifty feature that channel surfers like me appreciate. This allows you to see four, nine, or 16 channels on the whole screen at once. The catch with this feature is that only one channel is active at a time; click on the channel on the grid, and that portion becomes active while the other channels are “frozen.” While you can’t really view multiple channels simultaneously, it’s a fun way to flip to other channels during commercials.

Macworld’s buying advice

The AverTVHD Volar Max isn’t as advanced as other TV receivers, but it’s also not as pricey. The basic TV viewing functions work well, as long as you have good TV reception. The personal video recording capabilities are limited, but it worked just fine. If you don’t mind possibly manually entering in program info for scheduled recordings, and you can put up with the workarounds for saving recorded videos to your devices, the Volar Max is a decent value.

Editor's note: Update 6/18/10 at 9AM with information about the programming guide.

[Roman Loyola is a Macworld senior editor.]

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  • AverMedia AverTVHD Volar Max

    Cons

    • MPEG-2 format for recorded files requires conversion for use on Apple devices
    • Incomplete program information

Avertv Volar Max Software Reviews

UPDATE November 2016: Still going strong on some of the older versions of Windows with Media Center I have, Microsoft have taken Media Center out of Windows 10 (the update will actually remove it from your PC or laptop!), but on my Windows 8.1 laptop it works fine as before, including the TV schedule that downloads, all in glorious HD with recording. I actually keep the 8.1 version around, having moved that to a new laptop, because I can use that to watch TV. I know, I'm a nut ;) I actually managed to get a couple of other media center applications to talk to this unit, fun if you're a tinkerer.
ORIGINAL: (Parts of this review come from my earlier review of the Avertv Hybrid Volar Max unit, which is technically similar, but comes with AverTV's own software suite. At the time of this writing I use the Windows Media Center version only).
This unit is intended for use with the Windows Media Center that is packaged with some versions of Windows Vista and Windows 7 - check before you buy - if 'Windows Media Center' is not an option in your start menu, your Windows doesn't have it, although you can upgrade the operating system to get it. Under Windows Vista and Windows 7, a TV tuner is recognized by the operating system (that is part of the reason Microsoft has integrated the Windows Media Center in some versions of Windows), and handled as an integral part of your computer, it isn't an 'alien' device, so to speak. Be aware that some versions of the Media Center under Windows Vista won't recognize digital (Clear QAM) channels - there is a workaround, but that generally requires a Microsoft update pack that is very hard to find, and no longer distributed by Microsoft. Even then, it is finicky, and I would recommend against it if you don't have what we call 'Windows internals'. The 'other' Avermedia adapter Avertv Hybrid Volar Max has its own software for this, and should work right out of the box in this instance, costing $20 to $30 more.
Once the drivers are loaded the Avermedia device is recognized and the Media Center will offer to have it detect and program all available broadcast channels - analog TV and digital TV. If your computer is set up to display HD TV (which normally requires an HDMI connector, and an HD flat panel TV set up to display at a 1920x1280 resolution at 60 Hz - 30 will work too) you can watch and record HD TV 'at full throttle', so to speak - please remember, many PCs do NOT provide that resolution natively, but need an external HD display for it! If connected via an HDMI cable, and with a Dolby decoder built into the TV, or connected through the TV, this unit will provide full spec HD. Pretty amazing.
The Avermedia tuner picked up all available cable channels flawlessly (it is capable of receiving from an indoor or outdoor TV antenna, digital or analog, as well) and Windows Media Center downloaded the entire programming schedule for it, once I had told it my location and cable system. This is, to me, the only way to use this tuner - the TV schedule Windows pulls down from the internet is free, you can see what is on, program detail, and you can check the schedule a week ahead of time and program anything you want to record. It is important that your PC is fast enough - recording HD television with Dolby 5.1 audio, both of which the tuner receives and makes available, requires a LOT of horsepower. Even more if you want to use the PC for other things while you have the TV running, which is perfectly possible. A 64 bit version of Windows helps, as does extra memory. 64 bit Windows can handle 8 GB of RAM or more, provided your motherboard and BIOS are capable of addressing that. Several of my laptops were, but the VAIO desktop I am now using can only address 4 GB of RAM. For HD TV, that is fairly marginal, due to the memory requirements of the graphics chipset. Remember as well that the USB port the unit is plugged into shares its bandwidth among all USB ports, and if you have a lot of active USB devices, the port performance can degrade, and make TV watching a hit-or-miss proposition.
But it is there, and if you want to play with TV, or if you want a cheap DVR/PVR, this unit is cheap, works very well, and gives you all the advantages of a cable company DVR. For recording, you will need to make sure you have a huuuuge hard disk in your PC (one one hour HD program will take some 4GB of disk space), or better still, an external drive to store recorded TV on. Remember that the Windows Media Center works like a DVR, meaning you can pause and review what you're watching, but for that to work it needs a good amount of disk space, as it continually saves what you're watching to a temporary file structure that can get quite large, and that you cannot turn off.