(I can not figure out how to use the "insert image" button)
You can zip the video file and attached it as you did the other zip files. Or you could upload it to a cloud storage site such as Google Drive, DropBox, or OneDrive, and share the URL with us.
I am using an Intel Core i5-8400 CPU with 8 GB ram through an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 Ti . Should that configuration use Red October HD?
That should be fine. I'm using an Intel® Core™ i5-3570K Processor with 16GB of memory and an MSI GeForce GTX 1060 6GB graphics card, and it can handle all video I throw at it. But as Yaobing says, that only affects playback, not recording.
Have you configured the HD HomeRun Connect Quattro to use JRiver BDA Compatibility Mode, as per the Wiki article? See
https://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/TV_Tuners#HDHomeRun Ah, I see you have done that:
https://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php/topic,119484.msg826316.html#msg826316I see
you had help getting EPG123 up and running. You can certainly automate that process easily, either inside MC or externally. EPG123 is just another way of getting XMLTV data from Schedules Direct, and can be run from within MC quite easily. If you get stuck there are a lot of threads on the forum about EPG123. The
EPG Wiki provides just about everything you need to know, and
this post explains how to set up MC2XML to collect Schedules Direct data, which is similar to using EPG123.
As to the blockiness, that could be interference from other DVR programs accessing the HD HomeRun tuners. As you have a new Windows 10 installation I assume that you no longer have Windows Media Center installed on the PC. WMC could definitely cause problems with recordings, even when it wasn't running, as it always had tasks running in the background which touched tuners. I believe the Silicon Dust technical people suggested that could be the case with their DVR software.
Are you still running PLEX as well? That could also interfere with MC recordings. Note that because DVR software runs processes in the background, turning them off may not be enough to stop the interference, unless you dig deep into their configuration, and possibly the Windows Registry. Uninstalling them is the only way to be sure there is no interference. Also, you had PLEX running on your NAS I believe? It could well be communicating with the tuners. That would also need to be uninstalled, despite the risk of an uprising at home. WAF is real!
You seem to have made progress with all this back in 2019:
https://yabb.jriver.com/interact/index.php/topic,119484.msg826354.html#msg826354What changed?