you hook it to your tv using the colored chords to match them and then keep trying you may have to try a few times to get it right.
your camera should have some kind of output...just plug it into the VCR, get the vcr onto the right input to see the camera, set the VCR to SLP with a tape with a good amount of time you can record and set the vcr to automatically rewind when it reaches the end while recording. put one of the vcrs outputs to a tv and make sure the vcr is getting the input from the camera right. from there set the vcr on record. all done!
Yes, the LG 42LH40 is compatible with VCR's of all kinds. It has the A/V jacks that are necessary to hook it up.
Get Final Video Downloader, download the videos(and set it to convert), burn them to a disk, connect you DVD player to your vcr, set the vcr to record, play the disk, when the disk is finshed stop recording, job done. *gives you a thumbs up*
You can use this Plasma TV which will work with any old VCR since you can buy and converter that you can attached to your VCR to the Plasma TV.
If the VCR and/or DVD don't have the same type of connector that your tv set does, you can buy adapters that will convert from cable to two-prong in order to connect to your tv set. Connect from the OUT connector on the back of the DVD or VCR to the back of the tv where you normally connect the antenna. The antenna is not necessary when viewing the DVD or VCR.
not by itself, there must be some tuner controlling the input from the airwaves or the cable. I haven't seen a vcr with no tuner. It would also be difficult to use with no monitor to view the set up of the vcr itself
no
Most VCR/DVD's only have one set of inputs and one set of output, unfortunately.
You'll find all that in the owner's manual.
Buy a new VCR, then use the remote that came with the new VCR to control the new VCR. Also get a DVD player you caveman
table, vcr, clock, goals
All JVC VCR's use the same heads and so will give equal playback quality when hooked up to a HDTV.