The Yamaha YAS-101 is the best, cheap vertical sound bar that can be attached to your television. As of 2013, sounds bars range in price from $200 to $2,000.
check your surround sound if it has an HDMI or AV input jacks. if it has, then you are good to go. from your satellite receiver, attach the HDMI cable or AV cable. connect it to your surround sound. after connecting the satellite receiver box and surround sound, attach the HDMI or AV cable from the surround sound to your television.
Well, you are talking about two separate sound outputs. The audio built into the PC and the audio system that is built into the HDMI system. If you don't use the audio from your pc...the sound is heard from your hdmi device...in this case the TV. Most TVs don't have a spot to simply attach a subwoofer and you have to once again send the output (from the TV) to an external amp...where you can attach external speakers and a subwoofer. Or...you can simple use the PC audio to plug into a speaker system with a subwoofer. Your TV becomes strictly a MONTIOR.
I assume you are talking about a surround sound system, they have the cheap ones at walmart for about 100 dollars. They just get more expensive from there though.
happened to me, mine was the power supply shorting against the chassis. somehow it seems that the power supply board shifted when moving the tv. It is easy to remove but finding a cheap replacement can be difficult.
Get some Soundbar Brackets and attach it directly to the TV, above or below, even in a corner. If your TV does not have the facility for soundbar mounting, there are brackets available that connect to the VESA mount points on the back of the TV that extend below the set to place the sound bar.
TV always came with sound. There was never a "silent" TV. In fact by 1928 movies had sound.
First silent movies had no sound, but tv had always sound from the start.
You can attach a microphone to it and amplify the sound.
Sound TV was created in 2005.
When buying a cheap tv one should look out for fake consumer reviews. Generally, looking at multiple sites for reviews prevents falling for fake problems. Also, the specifications of the TV are important, but may be distorting the actual quality. If possible, go to a local retailer to look at the TV one has in mind and evaluate the sound and screen quality before making a choice based on numbers.
hitachi tv has sound no picture
The experimental one that John Logi Baird made was (1925), and it used vertical scan lines not horizontal ones like today's televisions. Did be fooled by your concept of what a television was though, this TV was a crude silhouette and definitely not for public consumption. But the commercial ones like the "GE Octagon" that were sole to the public in 1928 did have sound. However the problem wouldn't have been sound output in 1928, it would have been television transmitting stations. There were less than a handfull world wide at that time.