You can try placing a very small drop of Crazy Glue on to the end of a blunt toothpick and touching the end of the RCA plug. Wait to dry and then pull it out.
To use analog 3.5 mm jack RCA cables and the PS4 optical audio cable, you will need a DAC; then your Logitech speakers should work.
A 3.5 mm input is a line level signal, and a turntable has a phono level signal. You can connect these, but you will need a phono preamp to go in between the two. An RCA cable plugs into to the preamp from the turntable, and an RCA to 3.5mm cable connects the preamp to the stereo.
If the DVD player doesn't have COMPONENT connectors, you will have to use a input on the TV that has RCA input connectors.
The Bose 321 system does not support Hi-Def inputs, so the best idea is to use it just for sound. Connect the digital audio output of the Cable box to the optical input of the 321. Connect an HDMI cable from the Cable box to the TV directly.
The purpose of an RCA cable or connector is to carry audio. It has a red connector for the right stereo channel and a white or black connector for the left stereo channel. One example of how an RCA audio cable could be used is to connect a CD player to other stereo equipment.
1.for video composite cable yellow use rca male to rca male video cable. or component (recommended if tv has this input) 3 pairs of rca male to rca male video called rgb cable. 2. for audio out use pair of rca male to rca male cable.
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.
To use analog 3.5 mm jack RCA cables and the PS4 optical audio cable, you will need a DAC; then your Logitech speakers should work.
via something like this: Composite and Y/C (S-Video) to VGA Monitor Converterhttp://www.allthings.com.au/Catalogue/Monitors/vid%20to%20vga%20plus.htm
A 3.5 mm input is a line level signal, and a turntable has a phono level signal. You can connect these, but you will need a phono preamp to go in between the two. An RCA cable plugs into to the preamp from the turntable, and an RCA to 3.5mm cable connects the preamp to the stereo.
If your TV has rca input jacks for video games, etc. then all you need is to connect to the output rca connection on the cable box and you are good. Just remember that you won't have to tune the TV to get the channels. You will have to use A/V mode all the time to watch your favorite shows.
The S-Video connector and cable will give you a better picture than coax or a RCA type pin video connector and cable will.
Get a coax to RCA adapter to meet your needs. You can probably pick one up at the `Shack or some other local electronics store.
It is there as a "pass through". This comes in handy if your deck only has one set of RCA outputs. It enables you to "daisy chain" multiple amps together. You would run the RCA cables from the deck to amp #1's input, then use a another cable from the output on amp #1 to the input on amp #2.
Yes, as long as your T.V. has an auxiliary input in the back. The cable box will have the option of using auxiliary input (which is the input on the back of T.V., like a threaded nipple, with a pin-size hole down the center) or RCA inputs (which you don't have to worry about).
If your television has a broken coaxial input but has three AV inputs (Red, White, and Yellow), and your cable box has the same AV inputs in the back of it, which they usually do, all you have to do is connect the cords from the cable box to the TV(if you dont have the RCA cords, these can be purchased at any electronic store). Instead of putting your TV on channel 3 or 4 as you would when the cable is hooked up by coaxial, switch your channel to one of your Input or Video channels, as you would do if you were trying to watch a VHS tape or DVD. You'll see that the AV outlets provide just as good of a picture as the coaxial hookup.
You can use RCA cables or coax. You will see on the back of your Dish receiver a TV out for either coax or the RCA cables out, then plug the cable into the input of your TV. Be sure to tune your TV to whatever input you choose to view dish satellite programming.