There are many ways in which one can use a S video to composite cable. The simplest way is by using an adapter if your signal source allows video input.
You can buy a composite video cable at a dollar store, at Best Buy, at Walmart or Target. You may be able to find one in the Electronics section of a charity store.
It the single cable that carries basic VIDEO from one device to another. It is color coded with yellow connectors most of the time.
A VGA composite cable is a Video Graphics Array cable, it contains three rows of five pins in one connector and is used to connect computers to monitors.
A composite cable is one that has three video (Red, Green, Blue) cables and 2 audio (Red, White) cables.
There are five different types of TV cables one could use for their system. These are component video cables, composite cable, coxial RF cable, s-video cable, DCI and HDMI cables.
There are five different types of TV cables one could use for their system. These are component video cables, composite cable, coxial RF cable, s-video cable, DCI and HDMI cables.
There are two answers for this question. The first deals with composite signals and the second deals with cable. So... Answer one. Composite signals carry color video as a single signal. The resolution is limited to 480 lines or 576 lines because they are the two standard definition line counts. The signals are below 6MHz and are analog. There is no composite signal that carries HD signals. Answer two The cable that carries composite signals is generally fairly poor quality but is sufficient for short links between a DVD and a television for example. Longer runs need a co-ax cable designed to run video signals. The cable is identified as a 75 Ohm cable, that being a characteristic of the cable required for standard video transmission. Although there are many different grades of co-ax cable, a reasonable quality cable is capable of running any composite signal and will also run digital video in standard and high definition as well. Most video signals use the same type of cable so strictly speaking, there is no such cable as "composite".
S-Video is a type of composite video signal. The 4 pins are Chrominance, Luminance, and 2 grounds. Your standard composite video cable combines Chrominance and Luminance into one signal, which is then separated again by the TV. An S-video cable removes this step. The "y, pB, pR" cable set is known as "component" video. this cable goes one step further than S-Video, breaking down the Chrominance signal to individual colors, using Red (pR), Blue (pB) and Luminance (y). The TV then uses additive and subtractive methods to determine Green.
Composite video runs all of your video through one channel. This is typically a yellow tipped RCA cable - the kind you would hook up a VCR or DVD player with. Component runs three separate video lines that each carry one color, and then they combine in your tv. The colors are typically labeled Y Pr and Pb. To connect that you would need to run three RCA cables, or a triple RCA cable. Component offers a better, cleaner picture.
It would best to buy a new one.
The colors of the RGB cable stands for several things. If your cable has one red, one white, and one yellow colored connector it is called a composite cable. The yellow connector is the video, while the white and red are the left and right audio cables.
All 7000-series models come with two component and two composite video inputs. Using the cable that comes with the console you should be able to connect your Wii to one of the composite inputs. (These have a yellow port for video, plus a white and red port for audio. These are usually labelled as A/V or S-Video.) If you have a Wii component cable (a cable with red, green and blue connectors for video plus red and white for audio) this can be connected to the component port. The Wii does not support HDMI.