NEWS: Virgin Media slashes the price of its V+ high-definition TV box for Christmas

Andy Clough 03 December 2007 15:22

Virgin Box
Virgin Media is slashing the installation cost of its V+ set-top box from £150 to £75. Anyone who signs up for Virgin Media's cable TV service between now and December 31st will get the box installed at half price.

The V+ box is a personal video recorder (PVR) with a 160GB hard drive that enable users to record up to 80 hours of standard-definition TV. It has three tuners, so you can record two programmes simultaneously while watching a third.

And if you have an HD-ready TV, the box allows you to view the BBC's trial HD channel plus a selection of free and pay-per-view high-definition material, including popular TV series from C4 and a selection of movies (£3.99 each).

Once you've paid to have the box installed, you'll have to pay a monthly subscription depending on which TV package you choose.

Virgin says that if you sign up before December 12, it guarantees it will install the new box in time for Christmas.

To find out more, log on to the Virgin Media website.

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Comments

LOST December 3, 2007 22:45

just ordered mine a few minutes ago so will let you know how good it is !

Jimmyb983 December 4, 2007 13:51

Does anyone know if this is available to existing customers?

paulusmasonus December 8, 2007 14:47

If you go for this prepare yourself for bad customer service. Keep an eye on your bills.

northantsbloke34 December 8, 2007 20:19

  paulusmasonus said:

If you go for this prepare yourself for bad customer service. Keep an eye on your bills.

December 8, 2007 2:47 PM  

What?? I have never had any problems with virgin or ntl. But i guess all service providers make mistakes sometimes even virgin (and esp sky!!).

Having mine upgraded to v+ on tues

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About Andy Clough

Andy Clough studied English and French at Leeds University and has been a journalist for 20 years. Andy was editor of What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision for five years, before launching Home Cinema magazine and editing the Ultimate Guide series. Andy is now Editor of whathifi.com