Yes, using an HDMI cable will generally provide a better picture quality compared to a SCART lead. HDMI supports higher resolutions and digital signals, resulting in clearer images and better color accuracy. SCART, being an older analog connection, is limited in terms of picture quality and can introduce signal degradation. Therefore, for the best visual experience, HDMI is the superior choice.
To connect a video source to a TV using a SCART cable, you can simply plug one end of the SCART cable into the SCART socket on the video source, and the other end into the SCART socket on the TV. Make sure both devices are turned off before connecting the cable to avoid any damage.
No need. HDMI is another plug and has nothing to do with SCART.
for a high definition signal on a playstation 3 you need a hdmi cable using a simple scart lead will only give you standard deffinition if you are looking to buy a hdmi cable the cheapest ones are on eBay
The difference between digital cable TV and regular cable TV is the quality of the video stream that is being presented on the TV screen. A digital cable will provide a better quality picture, usually with a larger framerate and bitrate and as such these will look better on a larger TV.
The Toshiba 46sI412u is already a 1080p LED TV. If you are using this TV with a cable box, you need to do fix the picture quality on the cable box. Some cable boxes will automatically detect the picture quality.
Redmere technology in HDMI cables allows for longer cable lengths without signal degradation, resulting in better picture and sound quality.
You connect a DVD player to a TV via a scart cable and a composite or HDMI cable. If using a composite cable, ensure that the colors on the plug match up with those of the audio and video jacks.
It's better!The S-video connection is not overrated. It's better than the coax connection and is better than the Yellow-Red-White RCA interface, so if that's what you're using now, you will see an improvement. The S-connector is enough of an improvement that you can see the difference if you have a very good picture on the screen to start with.
The short answer is yes, RF leads are inferior to scart leads. There are several reasons. A scart lead is used in Europe as a combined video, audio and control connection between video equipment. All signals are carried without any encoding onto to a radio frequency carrier so they avoid the slight losses that RF encoding and decoding generate. Scart leads are also capable of carrying S-video, component and RGB signals as well as composite. Composite uses a single wire or channel for all brightness and colour information and this limits the quality of the image. Using S-video, comoponent or RGB allows more information to be carried and the quality of the image is better as a result. RF leads will only carry a composite signal and will therefore never be capable of the better quality of the other signal formats. Scart leads can also carry switching information so a television will automatically select a Scart source when a valid signal is present on the lead.
No, a VGA cable does not carry audio. You will need a converter that has an audio input to add the sound channel to the VGA picture channel.
you need an HD Ready TV and an HD Broadcaster or Blu-Ray player and link them to TV with a HDMI cable....using any other cables like SCART,Composite,S-Video will mean your NOT watching HD so be sure its connected by HDMI
absolutely its alot quicker and better graphics out of it as well i suggest you switch if your tv has HDMI