Set-Top Boxes

Shopping guide to Set-Top Boxes, from Ethical Consumer.

Shopping guide to Set-Top Boxes, from Ethical Consumer.


This is a buyers' guide from Ethical Consumer, the UK's leading alternative consumer organisation. Since 1989 we've been researching and recording the social and environmental records of companies, and making the results available to you in a simple format.

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The report includes:

  • Ethical and environmental ratings for 15 set top boxes
  • Best Buy recommendations
  • Digital options
  • Standby power
  • Workers rights

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Score Ratings

Our ratings are live updated scores from our primary research database. They are based on primary and secondary research across 19 categories. Find out more about our ethical ratings

 

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Best Buys

as of Sept/Oct 2007


As our ratings are constantly updated, it is possible that company ratings on the scoretable may have changed since this report was written.


TVonics is the Best Buy both in terms of social and environmental factors. Its MDR-200 model, coming top of the table and priced at £49.99, is manufactured in South Wales and carries the Energy Saving Trust Recommended logo. All TVonics products are available directly from the company (tel 0870 80 30 551) or through its website www.tvonics.com.

Another environmental Best Buy, due to low standby power consumption, is the Logik Vesa, also priced at £49.99 and available from Currys and Dixons.

 


Digital revolution

Mary Rayner asks whether we can go green and digital at the same time?

All TV watchers have to switch over to digital by 2012. Greater choice of free channels and better clarity are its two selling points. But do we really want to watch more TV, and what are the social and environmental implications? This report covers ‘Freeview’ set top boxes only, not paid for services such as Sky and NTL.


Digital options

There are two ways to receive a digital signal:
1. Receivers
One is to buy a receiver, called variously ‘Freeview set top box’, ‘digital set top box’, ‘digital TV adapter’ or ‘digibox’ (but all doing the same thing). This is simply plugged into your existing TV (providing you have a ‘scart’ connection, which most newer TVs do). Some ‘adapter’ set top boxes just receive the digital signal, whilst others can record programmes. Recorders tend to use more energy. Basic adapters are the focus of this report.
2. New TV
The second is to buy a whole new TV set with an integrated digital tuner. This is where environmentalists get cross, as it encourages people to replace perfectly good existing TV sets with new, and often bigger, ones. Already, two million TV sets are discarded in the UK every year and most end up in landfill sites.(1) So, as long as your existing TV has a ‘scart’ socket (oblong-shaped with two lines of small holes), then all you should need is a set top box.


Standby for energy waste

A big green worry is the energy consumed by set top boxes on standby mode. It’s estimated that the combined standby power use of all electronic goods may account for 1% of energy related CO2 emissions worldwide.(2) In an attempt to catch the public’s ‘green’ imagination, the chief executive of DSG International (Currys, Dixons and PC World) has made a public appeal to manufacturers to phase out the standby function.

Until such time as we say good riddance to standby, consumers can choose from some very energy efficient set top boxes. For each brand on our ethical rating table, we’ve tried to find the most energy efficient model. The recommended European standby level for set top boxes is 2 watts, but most models currently use far more than this.

Alternatively, you could turn your box off at the plug. But beware, some people do have problems resetting their boxes after this. We’re looking to collect information on this subject for a future campaign. If you have a set top box which is OK to switch off at night, please let us know the make and model number. Write in or email mail@ethicalconsumer.org.

Currently, the only model to carry the Energy Saving Trust ‘Energy Saving Recommended’ logo is the TVonics MDR-200. The Logik Vesa, available at Dixons and Currys, is actually manufactured by TVonics. It is virtually the same model as the MDR-200, but doesn’t come with the ‘ultra low power standby’ function.


Power use

Brand Model(s) Standby power Operating power Price*
TVonics MDR-200 3.3w/1w** 3.9w £49.99
Logik Vesa 2.3w 4.3w £49.99
Philips DTR2520 5w/1w*** 10w £55
Goodmans GDB3 4.33w 5.59w £40
Goodmans GDB6 4.33w 5.59w £49.95
Bush DFTA11 4.8w 8w £29.99
Alba STB8 5w 7w £19.99
Bush DFTA1001 5w 10w £49.99
Humax F2 FOX T 5w 10w £69.95
Hitachi HDB70 5.3w 8w £39.99
Goodmans GDB7CA 7w 7w £45
Sagem ITD62 8.8w 10w £29.99
Daewoo DSD9502T
DSD9503T
11w 18w £120
£140
Grundig GUSTV801V 11.2w 18w £129.99
Beko Digifusion FRT103 - 7w £24.99

*Prices are approximate only and are subject to change.
** Ultra low power standby. *** Low power mode.


Happy workers?

Of the companies covered, only DSG International (Dixons and Currys) has a policy addressing workers’ rights in their supply chains that meets our criteria for a middle rating. No company has shown evidence of independent monitoring.

We asked all the companies on the table where their set top boxes are made. Most didn’t give us an answer and of those that did all were made either in East Asia or Turkey, where working conditions can be poor. The only exception was TVonics, which assembles all its set top boxes at a Sony factory in South Wales, meaning low transport emissions too.


Links

• To see whether you can receive a digital signal in your area, and for more information on the digital switchover, see www.freeview.co.uk, or call 08701 111 270.
• Sick of TV? Take a look at anti-TV group White Dot, organisers of TV Turnoff Week, at www.whitedot.org or info@whitedot.org.
• For information on recycling electrical equipment, see Recycle More at www.recycle-more.co.uk, or call 08450 682 572.

References

1 www.recycle-more.co.uk/nav/page1766.aspx, viewed 6/7/07 2 International Energy Agency, ‘Reducing Standby Power Waste to Less than 1 Watt: A Relevant Global Strategy that Delivers’, 2002

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