The Channel editor can be invoked from the Tools menu or by pressing the shortcut key F10. This is a modal dialog, you can't interact with Kbtv's main window while it is opened. In the list of channels you can click on the one you want to edit. With the up and down buttons on the left you can move its position and with the delete button on the right you can delete it. The name for the selected channel can be changed in the input box in the middle (changed after you hit enter). The green Add channels button invokes the dialog to add new channels which is explained next.
With the Reset button you can reset the channel list to what it was when you invoked this dialog, and OK and Cancel accept or reject the changes you made. If you have no channels set up yet, Kbtv creates one entry at channel number 0 for your first, and in many cases only, composite device. This can be used with a satellite receiver or a video camera, or any device that has an analog composite outlet.
To add new channels you can add a list of frequencies (separated by whitespace). This is mostly useful if you already have a list of frequencies from your (cable) provider, or if you want to add one or a few missing ones or maybe to experiment. You can also choose a local channel set and use the frequencies from that. Sometimes another channel set than your locale may have more or all frequencies you need. Experiment if needed.
It's generally recommended to use AFC, but if you must you can turn it off. AFC will pick the optimum frequency in the range between -2 and +2 MHz around the requested frequency. It is somewhat slower though, because the hardware needs to tune twice. The saa driver doesn't have AFC (but your tuner might do it internally).
Finally you can pick a composite device to be added as a channel. If any composite or frequency (after AFC and/or adjusting manually) is already in the channel list it will be ignored when adding. If you press OK and you entered one or more frequencies or chose a local channel set, you'll get the Processing dialog which is explained next. You can still reject any channel candidate there.
The screenshot above shows the Processing dialog after the first of the three requested frequencies has been accepted. Note that the second (201 MHz) is automatically changed to the optimum of 200 MHz. This is AFC at work. For every channel candidate you can accept or reject it and you can also manually fine tune the frequency between -2 and +2 around the target, should this be needed.
If all candidates have been shown and decided on the OK and Cancel buttons become enabled and you can decide if you want these channels to be added to your list. Duplicates will be silently ignored.
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