If you want to watch TV, plug the tv cable into the VCR's input(usally right next to the output).
If you still have trouble, I would suggest, plugging everything in and out and play with it until you have a picture. And, if you're VCR doesn't have AV input, you can buy a converter at your electronics provider. Ask the geek behind the counter for an AV to AC converter.
I reommend getting a Home Theatre unit which everything would go to and then that routes to the TV. So basically, all inputs go the to Home Theatre unit and it is used to route to the TV. The cable signal can also be split prior to going to the TV, so you can have cable input to the VCR or DVD recorder for recording purposes. The DVD and VCR are basically players, thus output a signal, so they are inputs to the home theatre unit. On the back of the home theatre unit you have inputs for all these devices. The cost of an entry level home theatre unit can be as low as $100 including speakers, and goes up (way up) from there.
The only 1 cable solution that carries both audio and video signals, including HD signals is an HDMI cable. However, there is a 99% probability that your DVD recorder does not have an HDMI input! 99.9 % of home theatre electronics for recording (DVR, DVD-R, and such) don't allow the recording of HD content. The exception to this is OTA broadcasts from Public Television. Recording HD OTA broadcasts is possible with a DVR that has an ATSC tuner built in. If you were to ask if there is a way to pump HD audio and video signals from a Coax out to the ATSC Coax in... the manufacturers have already thought of it, and that does not exist either to date as far as I know. With the amount of data that HD movies and HD sound contain, a 2 hour program would not fit on a dual-layer DVD +R, -R, or RAM. That is why HD-DVD players and Blue-Ray players have entered the home theatre arena. If you were to say, "But my DVD recorder supports 720p and 1080i"... that only means that the *player* functionality UPCONVERTS the 480i signal on the disc, to a decent picture that seems to have the look of HD quality.
And no, I have never worked at BestBuy.
Use the Yellow and white cord only if that is all your TV has. It is Mono. Stereo is when you have the red composite cable port on device too. You can use any RCA cables as long as yellow port goes to yellow port..etc.
There are two ways to do this:
# Using a coaxial cable, connect the TV and the VCR together. # Using RCA jacks and cables, connect the cables between the two.
Both scenarios allow taping and playback.
I assume you are talking a DVD player
, not a DVD recorder
.
If you have a newer TV, you should have multiple inputs that can be used for either device: composite inputs, component inputs, HDMI ports and the good old coax antenna connection. If this is the case, connect the converter box to one of these, and the DVD to the other.
If you have an older TV with only the antenna connector, you will need to manually connect and disconnect the devices, or buy a switch that allows you to change antenna inputs. If your DVD does not have an antenna output (many don't), you will need an RF modulator (RF converter), but you won't need the switch - the modulator will only connect to your TV when the DVD power is on, and otherwise will feed the converter box to the TV's antenna input.
Read the instructions that came with them.
get a cable splitter and some extra coaxial wire/ the splitter has a single cable connection on one end and 2 at the othet. They are cheap. The wire is a little more costly.
You can route other things such as your cable through the DVD player, or you can buy a splitter, whichs connects more than one object on one side and the other side plugs into your TV.
no it is impossible to hook up cable to the projector, the only way is not hook a asr cable to the DVD out box and the take rst cable from the out cable hook into the in port on the projector in conclustion you need a DVD player also
Actually, Blu-Rays can only hook up to HDTVs by using an HDMI cable
the remote wire only needs a power source for the amp to turn on, so if u have a looped cable running from the remote input on the amp to the front of the car with a switch and then back to the power cable on the amp u can control when the amp is on just by turning the switch on or off. otherwise u will have to figure out which cable on the back of the stereo is switched power, or which cable only supplies power when the car is running. and that would require a wiring diagram.
No. You do not have to buy a Samsung brand cable to hook up to the Blu Ray player. All cables seem to be the same and brand name cables only cost you more.
You have to buy a box that converts the signal from the DVD player into an RF signal. These can be found in the electronics department of most stores, or at Radio Shack.
as long as cable has enough length and both ends can be attached the 3 speed cable will hook up to a 4 speed the cable is only a linkage and has nothing to do with how many speeds your transmission has
No. Blu-Ray players require an HDMI cable to hook up to a TV and only HDTVs accept HDMI cables
You will have to use RCA jacks for your VCR.In general you'll want to hook it up to an auxillary channel.The reason is that your VCR is only going to give you standard definition and you'll want to hook your HD TV up directly to an HD Sources.
The only way to hook it up is to have a video card that has a coax input port. You will also have to have a converter to connect the 360 Cable and the coax cable too.
The only cable that connects a Blu-Ray player to an HDTV is an HDMI cable
Connect the coax cable from the game to the antenna in on the back of the TV set after disconnecting the cable that is currently hooked there. Turn the game on and change the channel selector to channel 3 or 4. If you would like both connected to the TV a the same time to avoid having to make this cable swap every time , you need a RF CABLE SWITCH also know as a A-B SWITCH.
You can only hook it up to that type of player if they have a USB output on them