When you purchase a DVD player, cables for audio as well as video is also included. All you have to do is connect the audio and video cables to your television and your ready to go.
Composite cables are used to connect the audio and video components from a electronic appliance to a television or monitor. A DVD player or video game console, for example, requires the proper connectivity of these cables.
Connect audio cables to the Audio Out on the DVD player to the Audio In connectors of the speaker system.
You can use one of 3 types of cables: 1) Composite video - yellow/white/black. This is the basic cable that almost all DVD players ship with. Basic standard definition video and analog audio 2) Component video + Analog audio - red/green/blue + white/black - This is for progressive scanning DVD players and TV's 10 years old or newer. Better video but analog audio 3) HDMI - one cable. This is for upconverting DVD players. 480p to 1080p video (not high definition) plus digital audio. You may have a DVD player and TV that have a S-Video player (multi-pin single cable), but that connection standard has almost completely disappeared.
If you plug your DVD player into your VCR, it will not display on your television. You need to connect your DVD player either directly into your TV via S-video, Component, or HDMI cables or you can connect the DVD player to an audio receiver first, which should then offer an output to the television.
Gather two sets of combination stereo audio and composite video cables. These bundled cables have a left and right audio cables as well as a composite video cable.,Turn off the DVD, VCR and television,Plug one bundled cable into the appropriate output jacks on the DVD player. Connect the other end of this cable to the appropriate input jacks on the TV. This lets you watch DVDs on the TV.,Plug the other bundled cable into the appropriate auxiliary output jacks on your DVD player. Connect the other end of this cable to the appropriate auxiliary input jacks on the VCR. This will allow you to send a signal to the VCR,Turn everything back on and make sure that you can watch DVDs and record from DVD to VCR.
That will depend upon the model of Sanyo and the model of DVD player you have. The best possible solution for most is to use component video cables. You will want to run the audio cables to a home receiver of some sort, since the projector has very poor speakers.
You need to identify the Audio/Video Inputs and Outputs on your TV. You need to connect the A/V cables from the A/V output of the VCR to the A/V input of the TV. Then you need to connect the A/V output of your TV to the A/V inpit of your DVD player. Once you do this you will be able to record onto your DVD RW disk.
You will need to use one video connection. If your DVD player and TV have it, you should connect them with one of these cables, in order of most preferred to least preferred: HDMI, Component Video (3 x RGB RCA), S-Video, Composite (1 Yellow + R/L Audio).
They are red and white, or red and black for analog audio. Digital cables can be any color, as can HDMI cables.
Connect the DVD player to a different input on the tv, if there isn't one use a video/audio switcher.
You need 2 AV Cables .Try to swap, you can try to connect them, but i suggest you go to local car audio Shop.
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