No luck, neither adding or substracting works :-( In fact, under windows the stick's led blinks while scanning, but under linux it stays fixed no matter which frequency it scans, so I suppose there's some kind of incompatibility between the driver and the hardware. Perhaps my model has a hardware revision slightly different from the supported by the driver. Now, I will try to turn on debug info on the modules to see if I can get more information about what's happening... Thanks anyway -- Jesús Jiménez jesjimenez@xxxxxxxxx El Viernes, 8 de Diciembre de 2006 22:03, Benjamin Gillam escribió: > Hi, I have a card with the same ID, mine is Freecom one. I do not use mine > as it screws up my system (keyboard stops working, other USB peripherals > stop working, kernel oopses,...), however, I had similar tuning problems. I > found that editing the initial tuning data worked. I think I adjusted all > values by 167k, and that seemed to make it work fine, so try adding or > subtracting that value from the values in the initial file > /usr/share/doc/dvb-utils/examples/scan/dvb-t/es-Alfabia (make a new file), > and see if that helps. > > Good luck, > > Benjie. > > Jesús Jiménez wrote: > > Hi > > > > I recently purchased a Redbell TDT-2Go DVB-T USB stick, as it appeared as > > Linux-compatible at linuxtv.org Wiki (Wideview driver, USB ID 14aa:0226). > > I've compiled and installed the latest CVS version of the dvb v4l > > drivers, and placed the right firmware into the right directory, and it > > gets loaded successfully. > > > > The problem is that, despite the stick is correctly recognized, tuning > > with the scan utility fails miserably. The output is as follows: > > _______________________________________________ linux-dvb mailing list linux-dvb@xxxxxxxxxxx http://www.linuxtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/linux-dvb