Video is picture and audio is the sound. Home Theater receivers have RCA composite or component, S-Video or HDMI for the video input, and RCA analog, Toslink (optical) or coaxial inputs for digital audio.
The yellow cable is the video. It plugs into the yellow video input jack. The white and red, or black and red cables are left and right audio. The connect to the audio in or out jacks.
A switcher that will connect 2-3-4 other devices such as a camera, vcr etc. one at a time to a single audio/video input on the TV set.
If I understand the question, you are trying to intertwine different functions. Like your ears, the audio input jack receives an audio source, while the audio output jack transmits outputs audio content - similar to your mouth. If you are trying to redirect the input audio directly to the audio output port you will need a "passthru" (aka monitor) function. -P2E
HDMI cables can carry audio but it is in digital format only. Any HDMI connector will be capable of carrying the audio content and any input should be capable of receiving and processing the audio in digital format. There should normally be no need to use analog audio with HDMI but there is one notable exception. HDMI shares the same video interface format as DVI, the digital display output used on computers. However, DVI does not support audio so a cable that links a DVI output to an HDMI input will not carry audio. For this reason, many new televisions have at least one HDMI input that also has an analog audio input associated with the HDMI port. This is specifically provided to cater for DVI + analog audio as delivered by many computers.
Red and white are audio, yellow is video. This applies to standard A/V only.
No i think it has to do with the audio in TV's but i do know it has nothing to do with video.
Composite video input for video and analog audio cables for audio.
The yellow cable is the video. It plugs into the yellow video input jack. The white and red, or black and red cables are left and right audio. The connect to the audio in or out jacks.
Connect Audio out on the box to Audio In on the TV set. Make the same connection for the VIDEO. Use Input 1 on the TV then select Video 1 on the remote, Use the INPUT button.
No, it is the processing unit. The input would be its controller, output could be the video and audio as well as its rumble (if you have a controller with rumble).
A switcher that will connect 2-3-4 other devices such as a camera, vcr etc. one at a time to a single audio/video input on the TV set.
Yes but if there are audio/video connectors use them, you will get a better picture and audio.
For this purpose, you will have to download a program like ScreenRec. ScreenRec not only records a video but accepts audio input too.
The optical input on a TV is used for transmission of digital audio, in SPDIF format between devices, only.
Connect the av cable video plug to the composite video in (yellow). Connect the left and right audio to the stereo audio input, or connect these to your surround sound system.
The system does no video switching, a audio only system, where other systems will switch AUDIO and VIDEO both at the same time.OR if it is a A/V type it means the unit has some inputs that do not have video such as a CD Player. This is normal.
Only if your projector has two inputs,hook up the output video/audio of VCR into the input video/audio of the projector. Radio Shack sells switchers to do this very function.