Hi,
Suunds like you may be playing a regular CD in your player, which should play audio CD's. If you're playing a DVD, then it sounds like you either don't have the video cable connected to a TV set or you haven't selected the correct video input on your TV.
Hope this helps,
Cubby
It doesn't work.
Try changing the source on the television to AV1 if you only have sound but no picture from a DVD player. If it is on TV it will not play a DVD.
If you have hooked up your DVD player and get sound but no picture, try changing the picture source from TV to AV 1.
If you're using the RF cables, tune the TV to the correct channel and you should have sound. If you're using the RCA jacks, don't forget to add the audio cables for sound.
the difference between an audio and a video cassete is that an audio casssete is designed as such to store only sound track while a video cassete store sound as well as visual data e.g movies and video songs etc
DVD outputs at a higher bitrate, which would equate to a better picture quality at the same spindle speed.
It is possible to wire a DVD player just for the picture, and not for sound, although most people prefer to have sound. Dialogue can be very interesting.
The sound and picture quality of the DVD won't be very good, and the disc cover/case cover will not be of high quality either.
replaced the chips after threats of lawsuits from Macrovision Corporation and the Motion Picture Association of America. This DVD player also was the first consumer device that played MP3 files
No picture, just sound
I don't think so. A DVD burner is necessary to burn a DVD. DVD or CD-rw drive could not burn DVD. And if you use a CD burner to burn DVD, when you play it, you will discover that only the audio is available, you can't get the picture. More details in the link.
There are a few disadvantages of DVD-D. The biggest disadvantage is that it holds much less memory than a Blu-ray disc, and therefore has lower picture and sound quality.