I can offer you a wide variety of component cables for reasonable prices. The best quality cables I have will cost you from $75 to $100, or a cheap and affordable ones but for a lower quality can cost you from $20 to $35
A system control cable is a cable attached between the Kenwood main receiver and a Kenwood component (ie. CD player, tape deck) to provide automatic operation of the component when the associated button is pressed on the receiver or its remote.
yes
and my composite cable is a phono cable n the cable is for my ps3
Component caries a better picture but you will need 2 extra cables for the audio.
The Sony Component AV Cable will fit the PS3 super slim model.
No. Just use a component cable or similar
No you can use a HDMI cable for A/V connections or an optional PS3 component cable
The PlayStation 3 comes with an A/V Cable for non HDTV reception. If your HDTV has only Component connections then you should purchased the PS3 component cable, otherwise purchase the HDMI cable. The component cable has a number of plugs which must be connected to the HDTV and the HDMI has only a single plug so is the preferred method to connect the PS3 to the HDTV.
the iPhone AV cable fit iPhone very well. You may be some iPhone component in bad quality.
no
Yes and No.If I understand the question correctly, you want to connect your cable box to your HDTV via HDMI, your DVR via component cable (Red, Green and Blue RCA connectors), and your VCR via component cables. Your HDTV should accept various video inputs - HDMI, component, and composite (the yellow RCA connector). Most argue that the HDMI connection will provide the best quality video. Next in quality is component video. Last is composite video. Your cable box may or may not have an HDMI connection. If it does and you subcribe to HD channels from your cable provider, then definitely use HDMI to connect to the cable box. If you have another HDMI input available on your TV, then connect it to the DVR (if the DVR has the HDMI output). Your VCR will likely have to be connected via composite cable. It's a crappy signal but VCR don't provide a great signal to begin with. Most VCRs only offer a composite (at best) output, anyway.
Then the component will not work or will be unreliable.