The technical term cardsharing comes from the English words card and to share, which literally translates as “share a card.” Most often, this method allows several receivers to provide full access to cable or satellite TV using just one access card. Having received a signal from the satellite, the server sends the information in encoded form to the set-top box, where the sharing program for Samsung Smart TV decodes it and displays the finished image on the TV screen.
Cardsharing Samsung smart TV – service features
It is possible to organize sharing on a Samsung TV of the 7 series and newer models without purchasing a separate tuner and remote control, as well as an HDMI-HDMI cord for connection. Samsung cardsharing is implemented using the built-in DVB-S2 tuner, SamyGo widget and Oscam plugin.
On the site you can choose several packages at once at a monthly price starting from 40 cents per one per month:
- Continent;
- NTV-Vostok;
- VIP-5.13, VIP-5.19, VIP-5.36, VIP-5.85, VIP-56.85;
- VIP-08;
- VIP-13, VIP-13.36, VIP-13.56, VIP-13.56.85, VIP-13.85;
- VIP-19;
- VIP-36, VIP-36.85;
- VIP-Gold;
- VIP-Platinum;
- X-channels.
If it is financially expensive for you to install a satellite dish or there is no way to provide cable television, card sharing through your TV will be the ideal way out of a difficult situation.
Advantages of Utgard.tv
Five years of experience in the market allows us to offer our customers high-quality Samsung sharing thanks to:
- Attention to each client - the support service is ready to help solve all problems that arise.
- Affordable prices – low cost of services in comparison with similar offers.
- Reliability – timely prevention and round-the-clock maintenance guarantee the quality of service.
- Unpretentiousness - support for both the traditional UDP protocol and the more modern TCP allows you to use the service even with low-speed Internet.
In addition, clients are offered diverse sharing packages, and there is also the opportunity to connect several at once. To do this, you need to select the optimal connection options.
Practical checklist for smooth viewing
Even the best CCCam or OSCam line needs two or three simple preparations. Update your receiver firmware, reset the ECM cache once a week and keep 15–20% free space on the USB stick or internal flash so that the reader can store keys without delays.
When tuning a dish, aim for MER/BER reserve: a two‑degree offset or a loose F‑connector often causes the “freezing” that users blame on cardsharing. Keep a short patch cord to test alternative routers, and save two profiles in OSCam — one for TCP, one for UDP — so you can switch instantly if your ISP starts filtering a protocol.
Utgard.tv monitors each hub 24/7, but you can speed up diagnostics by keeping a short log of your receiver actions. Note the time when you changed the channel, which CAID was active and whether you used Wi‑Fi or Ethernet. This tiny “journal” helps engineers reproduce your environment in the lab and return with a solution in minutes instead of hours.
- Keep two line slots enabled: if the first server hits a maintenance window, the second one instantly takes over without re-entering credentials.
- Run a monthly speed and latency test. Stable 1–2 Mbps with ping <80 ms is enough for SD/HD, but if jitter exceeds 20 ms, switch the router to wired mode.
- Save the Utgard.tv status page and Telegram bot @utgard_tv_bot to bookmarks — they publish maintenance notices before SEMrush or uptime monitors raise alerts.