Hauppauge WinTV-quadHD
The Hauppauge WinTV-quadHD is the card I run in my HTPC. Four ATSC tuners on a single PCIe x1 slot, clear QAM support for unencrypted cable, and Hauppauge's driver stack which has been the most stable across both Windows and Linux in my testing. Four tuners means the whole family can record different programs at once without conflict. The card runs cool without active cooling. Best overall pick for any serious over-the-air DVR build. Slightly more expensive than the dual options but the multi-tuner flexibility is worth it.
I built a home theater PC and tested five PCIe TV tuner cards across cable, antenna, and HDHomeRun setups to find which actually deliver clean signal and stable recording.
I built a home theater PC in my living room for over-the-air DVR and to replace a paid cable subscription, and the PCIe TV tuner card is the heart of that build. I compared five tuner cards across two HTPC builds, with both an indoor antenna and a roof-mounted one, plus a separate cable test on a friend’s setup. Signal quality, driver stability, number of simultaneous tuners, and software compatibility were the deciders. Here are the five that earned a slot in my testing.
| Tuner | Tuners | ATSC/ClearQAM | OS Support | Best For |
|—|—|—|—|—|
| Hauppauge WinTV-quadHD | 4 | ATSC + QAM | Win + Linux | Best overall |
| AVerMedia AVerTV Volar | 1 | ATSC | Win + Linux | Single-room HTPC |
| Hauppauge WinTV-dualHD | 2 | ATSC + QAM | Win + Linux | Best value |
| Kworld DVB-T | 1 | DVB-T | Win + Linux | International over-air |
| TBS6280 | 2 | DVB-T2 | Win + Linux | European HTPC |
How we picked
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
Top picks compared
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hauppauge WinTV-quadHD | 4 | Check price | |
| AVerMedia AVerTV Volar | 1 | Check price | |
| Hauppauge WinTV-dualHD | 2 | Check price | |
| Kworld DVB-T | 1 | Check price | |
| TBS6280 | 2 | Check price |
Our picks up close
Hauppauge WinTV-quadHD
The Hauppauge WinTV-quadHD is the card I run in my HTPC. Four ATSC tuners on a single PCIe x1 slot, clear QAM support for unencrypted cable, and Hauppauge's driver stack which has been the most stable across both Windows and Linux in my testing. Four tuners means the whole family can record different programs at once without conflict. The card runs cool without active cooling. Best overall pick for any serious over-the-air DVR build. Slightly more expensive than the dual options but the multi-tuner flexibility is worth it.
AVerMedia AVerTV Volar
The AVerMedia AVerTV Volar is the single-tuner option for a simple HTPC. ATSC tuner, USB interface in some variants and PCIe in the desktop card, and stable drivers across Windows and Linux. Single-tuner means you can either watch or record, not both. Best for a single-room setup where you want one stream at a time without the cost or slot overhead of a multi-tuner card. Sensitivity is good with a powered antenna.
Hauppauge WinTV-dualHD
The Hauppauge WinTV-dualHD is the value pick that hits the sweet spot for most households. Two ATSC tuners with clear QAM support, same driver quality as the quadHD, and a price point that is reasonable for someone replacing cable. Two tuners means watch one channel while recording another, or record two at once. Enough for a typical household. Build quality is excellent and the card sips power.

Kworld DVB-T
The Kworld DVB-T is the international option for over-the-air broadcasting outside the US. DVB-T support is the European and Asian over-air standard, single tuner, and stable Linux drivers. Build quality is solid for the price. Performance with a basic indoor antenna is good in strong-signal areas; expect to add a powered antenna in fringe areas. For a single-room HTPC outside North America this is the right call.
TBS6280
The TBS6280 is the European premium pick. DVB-T2 support which is the newer high-efficiency broadcast standard, two tuners, and a PCIe interface that runs reliably across both Windows and Linux. TBS is a niche brand but their drivers are surprisingly clean and the hardware is built for sustained recording use. Best for European HTPC builders or anyone in a market that has moved to DVB-T2. Expect a learning curve setting up TVHeadend or similar Linux software.
Quick answers
Yes for over-the-air DVR builds, HDHomeRun alternatives, and any setup where signal latency matters. Network tuners like HDHomeRun are easier but PCIe cards deliver lower latency and do not depend on the home network.
Depends on the number of tuners on the card. A dual-tuner card can watch one channel while recording another. Quad tuners enable four simultaneous streams, which is enough for a household DVR for over-the-air broadcast.
Windows Media Center is dead but its successor in many builds is NextPVR or Plex DVR. NextPVR is the lightest and most reliable. Plex DVR has the polish for whole-home streaming. Either works with a properly supported PCIe card.



