Mediasonic

Mediasonic ATSC Digital Converter Box with Recording Media Player TV Tuner Function HW130STB

206+ bought in the past month

$32.99$168.99

About this item

  • Receive Over-The-Air Digital Broadcast to your Analog and Digital TV, Projector, and Computer Monitor. Antenna Out Analog Pass Through, Favorite Channel List, Parental Control Function
  • HDMI 1080P Output / Composite Out / Coaxial Output, Closed Caption, Auto Tuning, Timing Start Up & Shut Down.
  • Real-Time Recording & Programmed Time Recording, recording require user to connect a USB 2.0 or 3.0 2.5" / 3.5" External Hard Drive via USB (Up to 2TB, MBR format) (USB Flash Drive Not recommended)
  • USB Multimedia function play back Video, Music, Photo from USB Drive
  • The latest Firmware is V4.1
  • **PLEASE NOTE**:This converter box is designed to receive Over-The-Air signal, and it is not a replacement of cable box. External Antenna is required to connect to this converter box in order to receive signal. This product does NOT Work with TIVO and cable company such as Comcast, DirecTV, DISH Network, Time Warner Cable, etc. In general, this product does NOT work with encrypted cable signal
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Product details

BrandMediasonic
Maximum Supply Voltage5 Volts
Mounting TypeCoaxial,Surface Mount
Number of Pins25
Interface TypeCoaxial, HDMI, RCA, USB

Technical specifications

brandMediasonic
maximum_supply_voltage5 Volts
mounting_typeCoaxial,Surface Mount
number_of_pins25
interface_typeCoaxial, HDMI, RCA, USB
number_of_channels1
product_dimensions5"L x 4"W
materialABS
upc629329006762
manufacturerMediasonic
brand_nameMediasonic
item_weight4.6 ounces
item_model_numberHW130STB
is_discontinued_by_manufacturerNo
color_nameBlack
best_sellers_rank#4,657 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #2 in Analog-to-Digital (DTV) Converters
date_first_availableApril 27, 2016

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Customer reviews

3.89,454 ratings

Customers say

Customers find the digital converter box easy to set up, particularly for timed recordings, and appreciate its good picture quality and value for money.

★★★★★

Replaced old model ATSC box with Mediasonic

Stephen D McLeodJuly 28, 2021

My new Mediasonic Homeworx replaced an older version of ATSC box that I bought directly from Shenzen on eBay several years ago. I really liked the old box until the flash memory stopped working. When new, the old box would let me create up to about nine DVR schedules. Then after about three years it went to zero. All the functions of the old box are still good, except for the DVR schedule. I am still using a second old version ATSC box where the DVR schedule capacity has gone from about 14 entries to four. I replaced the ATSC box with zero DVR schedule with a new Shenzen model. I expected it to be like the one it replaced. Instead the DVR schedule has an eleven day week and zero working flash memory to hold schedules. I am really hoping that the new Mediasonic will have better quality flash memory. Ask me in three years how the flash memory is holding up. Right now it looks very good. I have been using old model USB 1 Western Digital disk drives for DVR storage. They worked great on the old model ATSC box and work just as well on the new Mediasonic box. I assume that the new box will support USB 2, but have not tried it. The old boxes do not support USB 2. The old model Western Digital units arrived formatted as fat32. To use them for DVR storage I had to reformat them to NTFS. I suspect the reason thumb drives do not work is that they are formatted as fat32. I bet that after reformatting to NTFS, they would work. I noticed that the Mediasonic has a disk format feature in the menu. I did not need to use this, the USB 1 Western Digital drives transferred to the new box without a hitch. I had two boxes because I had two outdoor antenna. I’ve been experimenting. The first antenna has stopped working. I suspect it is because it is now pointing to the sky rather toward the horizon. I have it clamped to a plumbing vent that is now bent over after the last wind storm. I wanted two working ATSC boxes, one to watch while the other records or record different channels at the same time. I tried using the RF output on one box to the second box. That works, but there is significant signal attenuation especially when the first box in the series is working. I installed a Channel Master signal-splitter amplifier. Now both boxes get the same signal strength. I have two antenna on the roof on the same mount with a Wineguard signal combiner feeding a Channel Master antenna preamp. That feeds into the signal-splitter amplifier inside the house. All this gets me about 40-60 over the air channels depending on atmospheric conditions. The antenna mount once held a Direct TV satellite antenna. I’m thinking of another type of antenna to try. I might replace the antenna on the bent plumbing vent with something on a tower next to the house. We will see how much ambition I have. Some things to note. The Mediasonic menus are identical to the old ATSC box. The remote controllers have the same functions, but they are arranged very differently. With the two old model ATSC boxes, when I clicked the controller on/off button, one box would turn on and the other would turn off. That, I found, was a useful feature. I now have two separate controllers. I suspect, if I get another Mediasonic that this feature would return. I set my Mediasonic to the 24 hour clock. Please remember that it does not automatically switch between standard and day light time. I seem to get caught twice each year. The DVR scheduler assumes that a digit placed in one of the two hour slots means that a zero should be in the other. Why? The old model didn’t do this. I like that the Mediasonic DVR scheduler starts with the working channel. The old model did not do this. The old ATSC box DVR scheduler has an annoying bug. When more than two shows are scheduled to record where each starts on the same hour that the previous show ended, there is about a 20-30 second additional delay that adds up. This delay pushes the start time and end time forward by that amount. This means that after several iterations the start and stop times are out of sync with the shows being recorded. This is a real issue when recording one of those marathons where 10+ episodes are broadcast back to back. Making the stop time a minute earlier than the next start time seems to help. Except when the scheduler is turning on the unit before starting to record, then it turns off on the ending minute and back on at the starting minute. Fortunately there tends to be a lot of advertising between each iteration to absorb the slop in the time. I haven’t used the Mediasonic enough yet to check this on the new model. I noticed that the Mediasonic initial boot goes a lot faster than the old ATSC boxes. Otherwise there is no difference. -- It is now official: The bug described above is present in the Mediasonic. Here is instructions to reformat a thumb or disk drive to NTFS: Put the following in a Windows Shortcut Target: %windir%\system32\cmd.exe Start in: %HOMEDRIVE%%HOMEPATH% Use the following commands in the Microsoft Command Prompt Type "DiskPart" in the command prompt. Type "List Disk” (make note of the disk number of the target USB drive). Type "Select Disk X”, where X is the target USB drive noted above. Type "Clean”. Type "Create Partition Primary”. Type "format FS=NTFS”. Type "Active”. Type "Assign". Type "list volume". Type "Exit" Be real careful with this. As soon as you type “clean” the target disk is wiped clean. If you want to get rid of a disk drive and hide your data, use the above procedure. I suspect a well-equipped forensic lab can still get at your data, but not easily. The format can take a long time. A 1TB disk drive can take 8+ hours to format. Like those Western Digital disks noted above. Read more

★★★★☆

Nice tuner and recorder for the price.

DougODecember 27, 2025

Works really well, good tuner and great quality recording. The interface is a bit clunky to get used to. Built quality is all plasticky and pretty delicate, easy to get pulled over by a heavy cable, so you have to be careful and keep them from falling on the floor. Read more

★★★★★

This works great as an OTA DVR. There are some drawbacks, but for the price it is well worth it.

BillJanuary 25, 2024

This works great as an OTA DVR. There are some drawbacks, but for the price it is well worth the minor inconveniences. As a long-time cable cutter, the thing I missed most was the ability to time shift. The Mediasonic HW130STB takes care of that. If you expect this to do the same things your $200/ month cable box did, you'll be disappointed. If you think of it as a 2020's version of your old VCR, you'll be quite pleased The UI is pretty clunky and takes some getting used to. The remote has way too many buttons and would be much better if it was simplified. That being said, it gets 5 stars because it's about 1/3 of the price of one month's worth of cable and less than 1/2 of what the streaming services charge per month and yet provides robust recording options. You can record real time by pressing the record button. You can choose to schedule a recording from the channel guide, or you can record by time and channel like an old fashioned VCR. You can set it up to record a program or time slot one time or every day, week, month, etc. The HW130STB is a single tuner device, so your recording has to end before you can watch what you recorded. You also can't watch one channel while recording another. The picture and sound quality are both spot-on 1080 if you use an HDMI cable. It records in a standard format on a USB stick or USB drive that can be read by other devices. For the price, I am quite pleased. And if it stops working in a year, so what? It's cheap enough to just buy another. Read more

★☆☆☆☆

Other than recording, most TV with coaxial can give you the same thing this provides

RedAkuma82April 28, 2022

First off I would say about this is that it does not exactly last very long. It burned out from just being on stand by alone. I am not sure why this is. The next thing is that it does not come with an HDMI cable only RCA cable. That being said, this does what it is suppose to which is to get some channels. Other than recording though, most TV with coaxial can do what this box does. It does not give you any additional channels. Sometimes the TV gives you more but honestly everything depends on your antenna. The device is not perfect. The quality can be choppy as times but you can get the news and some random channels. It is definitely not a sport channel getting device. It does have a USB port that had limited movie playing experience. You can watch avi or mpeg formats. The device can be a bit buggy and actually crash during play or have sound lag. It does get a bit hot which makes me wonder if that was the issue for the device breaking down. The remote had to be in direct line of sight to register. It does takes two AAA batteries that are not provided. The connection is stable for the most part. I would recommend doing a few video scans. The video quality you can pretty decent video but there can be a bit of static here and there. The device does come with component cables. It CAN be hooked up via HDMI but the cable will need to be purchase separately. There are also a place for antenna in and out (antenna is recommended and needs to be purchased separately.) It runs on a traditional power brick. Overall I think this box is not really needed and it burns out super fast. You can get the same amount of channels on most televisions with a coaxial port built in. The only thing you get from this is recording. The user interface is pretty simple I am just concerned that this thing burns out way too soon on just stand by. Read more

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