Try again because the short answer is yes. You will be limited in the number and type of receivers and won't be eligible for the new customer programming discounts. I am not sure what the cost at this time, but it is an option.VideoDog said:
Try again because the short answer is yes. You will be limited in the number and type of receivers and won't be eligible for the new customer programming discounts. I am not sure what the cost at this time, but it is an option.VideoDog said:Can I avoid a contract with Directv if I buy a receiver and dish? I asked Directv and they told me no. But I figure they want me to sign up for a lengthy contract.
Not true. The commitment comes as part of the lease agreement addendum to the terms of service.studechip said:Even if you can purchase the equipment, you will be locked into a two year commitment because you are activating a new account.
True but with owned equipment he could keep it and then reactivate it later if he wanted. With leased equipment it would be required to be sent back. He could also sell the owned equipment if he chose to not reactivate to help recoup some of the costs.lesz said:I would think that getting new equipment and installation from DIRECTV, even with a 2 year service commitment would still be the less costly way to go. Even if the OP decided to leave DIRECTV before the end of the service commitment, the money saved by not having to pay for the equipment and the lower promotional programming costs should more than offset any early termination fees.
Shades is correct. There is a purchase option which requires 2 receivers to be purchased( can't do less and I don't believe you can do more though I'm not sure) and you pay regular retail pricing on the tv system. No discount for ABP if you are doing HD. Here is a breakdown...Shades228 said:You can order owned equipment as a new customer with DIRECTV just call them up and explain you want to do owned equipment and not have an agreement. You'll have some options and some upfront costs but it will all be owned and installed.
Matt is correct. Purchase option, month-to-month, retail pricing on programming, no discount offers, 2 receivers only at POS (install/rcvr pricing above is correct too). However, there is the option to add receivers after activation.MattScahum said:Shades is correct. There is a purchase option which requires 2 receivers to be purchased( can't do less and I don't believe you can do more though I'm not sure) and you pay regular retail pricing on the tv system. No discount for ABP if you are doing HD. Here is a breakdown...
2 standard receivers-$199 plus tax...that includes activation/install/receiver fees/etc.
1 standard/1 HD/DVR/HD DVR-$299 plus tax...
Sorry for the wrong info. I thought all new customers got a commitment regardless.The Merg said:Not true. The commitment comes as part of the lease agreement addendum to the terms of service.
The issue though is that you will find it difficult to create a new account using owned equipment. DirecTV is going to want to come out and perform the installation to make sure that the installation is set up properly. If you can get them to create a new account using owned equipment, you'll be good to go.
Even if DirecTV insists on coming out to set up the dish, you should still be fine. While they might charge you for the installation, as long as you are activating owned equipment, there will be no commitment.
- Merg
Doesn't necessarily work out for some people. If someone is a light sleeper for example, the hard drive noise can bother them. Plus wasn't fun when the power went out for a bit to have a blazing blue ring.RAD said:I say if you can afford the extra $'s get a HD DVR for the bedroom vs the H25. That way you can pause/RW/etc live TV which you can't with the H25, always better to get what you can as the new customer since they get the best deals.