There are two types of cable used for television radio frequency signals: 300 ohm twin lead flat cable and 75 ohm coaxial cable. The twin lead is typically used with a rabbit ears antenna and coaxial is typically used with roof top antenna or cable TV setups.
For television baseband video signals coaxial cables are usually used.
However for digital television baseband video signals these are not adequate and special cables (e.g. HDMI, DVI, DisplayPort) are used. These cables are typically many twisted pairs in a common shield.
Coaxial cable
Coaxial? 75Ohm Type "F" Connector RG54
`Coax' or `coaxial cable'.
You may be thinking of a co-axial cable.
Coaxial :)
coaxial
coaxial
Coaxial
A cable signal.
Chemical
The kind of signal you have would depend on who your service is through and what kind of service it is, and yes Rogers has a 'signal booster'.
The bottom line is 'no'. HDMI delivers a digital signal, as in 1's and 0's. There is no room for the kind of signal degradation that plagues analog connecton.
There are multiple reasons including damaged wires, network ports were disabled, cable is designed for a different kind of network, your firewall is not configured properly and so on.
VGA, a computer video output, cannot be converted to a composite (1 video wire) or component video (3 video wires) signal with just a cable. VGA can be much higher resolution than composite video. You will need a scan converter box to create the NTSC video signal.
Blood carries red blood cells which carries blood around your body
i am a direct tv tech. your cable should not exceed 150ft.direct tv uses low line voltage(13v and 18v) so no signal booster or signal amp can be used. use of any kind of booster or amp will ensure your dtv system will not work and may even be a fire issue. a 4 x 8 powered multiswitch from direct tv will keep strong signals with cable upto 150ft. J.Davis,North East,MD I've gone 20ft and no problem. If you have a good cable it will go longer.
Ethernet cable
Contact the cable company, and sign up. Pay for your cable. The existing wiring in your apartment is acting as a sort of off-air antenna. There are probably pretty strong off-air signals available in your area. If you don't want to sign up for service through cabel or satellite, then you may want to add some rabbit ears. Radioshack has some good ones that will strengthen the signal and aren't too big. If you are able to get some kind of signal through the cable jack, an RF amplifier may be able to boost the weak signal enough to produce a clearer picture. An RF amplifier like that used to boost an antenna's signal might work. Some of your cable signals may be out of the frequency range for the antenna amplifier to boost all of the channels. Don't expect any miracles like a crystal clear picture.