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North Carolina Time Warner Cable Customers Frustrated About Digital Adapter Shortage

Phillip Dampier December 17, 2012 Consumer News, Video 8 Comments
Static isn't just for the UHF dial, it's for powerhouse lobbying groups, too.

Eight channels are missing from Raleigh-area televisions.

Time Warner Cable dropped eight analog channels from its lineup in Raleigh recently, advising customers they will need either a digital transport adapter (DTA) or standard set top box to get those channels back.

But one Raleigh customer tells Stop the Cap! those DTA boxes are hard to come by at the moment, forcing some to get costly set top boxes instead.

“We have been told three times by Time Warner Cable there is a multi-week wait for the free boxes, but we can get all the set top boxes we want today, for more than $6 a month each,” complains Rachel, who has three TV’s that need a box solution. “You think they would have waited for enough equipment before they took the channels away.”

Now missing from the analog lineup: C-SPAN, CMT, Oprah Winfrey Network, VH-1 Classics, Discovery Fitness & Health, Lifetime Movie Network, TruTV and the Golf Channel.

Jim DuBreck thought he had nothing to worry about when Time Warner sent him a postcard alerting him those eight channels were only going to be available in digital starting this month. He told ABC11 he already has a digital TV. Time Warner did not tell him that was not enough to keep watching.

DuBreck later learned the cable company not only converted the channels to digital, it also encrypted them. His digital TV would still need either a set top box or DTA. Only he is still waiting for the five DTA boxes for his own televisions.

Time Warner told the station they have seen a much higher demand than anticipated for the adapters. So, there may be some temporary delays before receiving one. DTA boxes are free for two years, set top boxes are not.

twcCustomers better get used to it. Time Warner is gradually converting their systems to digital lineups, so as time goes by, more analog channels will disappear.

Time Warner Cable explained why:

“Moving analog channels to digital frees up capacity in our network to bring customers faster internet like we just did last week when we boosted the speeds of our standard internet service by 50 percent. Providing channels digitally also allows us to offer customers more because it’s dramatically more efficient: We can deliver up to four HD channels, or as many as 12 standard-definition digital channels, using the same capacity as it takes to carry one analog channel.”

[flv width=”600″ height=”358″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WTVD Raleigh Cable customer upset over Time Warner changes 12-14-12.flv[/flv]

WTVD in Raleigh helps Time Warner Cable customers understand where some of their analog channels are going.  (3 minutes)

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Low Tech
Low Tech
11 years ago

Does TWC allow people to get the DTA’s for free? Do they allow customers to provide their own?

Dave Hancock
Dave Hancock
11 years ago
Reply to  Low Tech

According to an earlier article they are free till November 2013 and then 99 cents/month. I do not believe that you can purchase DTAs anywhere. Part of the reason is that encryption is used and TW “needs” to keep control of that.

Dave Hancock
Dave Hancock
11 years ago

Of course, TW COULD provide regular Digital boxes at no cost till the DTAs are available!

Scott
Scott
11 years ago
Reply to  Dave Hancock

Customer service (including a cable box) will cost you an extra $6/mo.

siouxmoux
11 years ago

Really there are third tierd Networks anyways. They should have been on Digital Cable since day one.

Oscar@SA
Oscar@SA
11 years ago

If you have a central closet or setup where the cable line comes in then goes out to the house, you can try one DTA box there and have it decode for the entire house… Maybe it will work, maybe it will not…. unless the DTAs act as a cable box and you MUST change the channel using those…

Dave Hancock
Dave Hancock
11 years ago
Reply to  Oscar@SA

The technology to mass convert digital channels into analog never got past the preliminary stage – so having a single device to convert all channels simultaneously does not exist.

Basically the DTAs are stripped down cable boxes with limited capability. Ordinarily the FCC requires that decrypting digital channels be done with a CableCARD (that’s why today’s cable boxes have CableCARD slots in the back) but have granted exceptions for simple, low cost, low functionality devices (DTAs).

Oscar@SA
Oscar@SA
11 years ago
Reply to  Dave Hancock

we can only hope… lol

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