Darren Hart wrote:
I have been running a client/server combo myth box for a while using NFS root and recording storage (no local disk) because it was just too darn loud. Now I am looking at upgrading hardware and was curious what people think about modern disks, power supplies, case fans, etc. Can you build an "HTPC" with all those things such that you can hear the TV over the hardware noise? When the house is quiet, does that new box in the entertainment center draw all ears to it? And I am talking "living room", not "dorm room".

I fought with noise and heat in my living room mythtv box for a couple years. I switched PSU and HD and cooling system several times at significant cost. A few months ago as I was shopping for yet another cooler (this time to replace a waterblock impeller that had grown way too loud) I realized that the $80+ price range I was looking at was about the same cost as buying a used Xbox console. So this is likely to be a non-typical response to request for hardware suggestions. :)

I was planning on building a server box and leaving it in the office closet, and to hell with the dBs, then building the client with a nice mini HTPC case, CF boot disk (or maybe NFS). The drawback here is not using the PVR350 for video output.

Contributing factors to my situation:

0. I had a Myth frontend/backend dedicated box running for over 2 years in my living room. Heat and noise were always an issue.

1. I was planning to replace my 3 PVR250 cards with 2 PVR500 cards. I have replaced a PVR250 card every 6-8 months due to tuner failure, probably heat related, and had 1 card that was dead and a second dying at the time I was shopping for a new CPU cooler.

2. I don't use HDTV, only SD basic cable.

3. I was not completely happy with the TVout on my GeForce 4MX card, though it was mostly acceptable to me. It wasn't enough of an issue for me to buy a PVR350, but I did like the idea of having better TVout.

4. I pretty much only used my setup to watch TV, play music, and MAME games. I do all my scheduling via MythWeb, so I only used the frontend for playback. I never watch live TV. (And if I did, I would likely bypass the Myth box and just use the TV.)

So I'd love to hear experiences on case volumes with modern cases, hard drives, PSUs and case fans. I'd also be interested in how stable people's separate client / server installations are working out to be.

I originally planned to use a MythTV frontend running under Xebian, a Xbox distribution of Linux. I do indeed have that working, but rarely use it.

I am using XBMC and XBMCMythtv projects on a hacked Xbox with great results. I completely decommissioned my dedicated MythTV box and simply added a PVR500 card to my existing AMD64 SuSE93 server.

The Xbox boots in a matter of seconds to XBMC, so I can turn it off whenever I'm not using it. The TVout on the Xbox is WAY better than any nVidia card I've tried, and the overscan adjustment is perfect. I have all the functionality of the MythPlugins that I care about and can play videos and music easily. The gaming options as good or better and I have all the emulators I care about, plus the ability to play Xbox games if I cared to. Plus, I have an Xbox for every TV so I'm not limited to the living room. My total cost per Xbox was under $100 and it was the right solution for me.

That said, this is not the solution for everybody. For one thing, although it's not at all hard to do, it takes some determination. Also, if you need HDTV this isn't the way to go. You _can_ schedule programs using xbmcmythtv, but it's not working well yet, so if you can't use MythWeb that's a consideration. Of course, you can run the Myth frontend under Linux on the Xbox, and it can even work pretty well, but I quickly found that XBMC made it simple to use the Xbox as an appliance and it had all the functionality I wanted and more.

I'm not really trying to advocate anything specific here, my intention is to explain what I chose and why. There is no "right" solution, and it's important that we keep developing so many great open tools that can be assembled into whatever solution each of us chooses.

As for stability, I don't think I've had a failure that resulted in not having a show recoded more than twice in a couple years.

--Darren
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