TVonics MFR-300 review

A nice and simple Freeview receiver

TVonics
The TVonics MFR-300 is a Freeview receiver aimed at those with simple needs and is quite expensive for what it is

TechRadar Verdict

It may lack decent picture quality and connections, but its user-friendliness is second to none

Pros

  • +

    Discreet size

  • +

    Good onscreen menus

Cons

  • -

    High price

  • -

    Poor RF pictures

  • -

    Sticky remote buttons

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The TVonics MFR-300 allows users to convert an ageing analogue TV to digital without the need for a Scart, which explains the absence of such an output on the rear.

Instead, there are two RF connections, one of which accepts your aerial feed and the other outputs a modulated digital signal to the coaxial input on your TV. But you can also send better-quality pictures via the AV output on the front using an optional composite/ stereo audio-to-3.5mm jack cable.

It's oddly stylish, with an all-black finish and an opaque fascia that allows a red/green power light to twinkle through. If you want to hide the unit away, there's an infrared extender that plugs into the rear.

Because there's no Scart output, setup takes a little longer than usual. After you've hooked it up, you have to find a spare analogue channel on your TV and tune it to channel 38 (or to a channel of your choice) and you'll need to go through the same process on your analogue recorder if you want to loop it though that. But once you're up and running a first-time auto tuning mode finds all the TV and radio channels quickly.