Digital full HD
It depends on what kind of TV you have (LCD plasma old new). television housing can be made from polystyrene like POLYSTYRENE IMPACT 6540.
Wide screen TV provides a picture aspect ratio that has been found to offer a more pleasing shape to watch. The 4 : 3 format of older televisions has been used for decades because that is how television was first formatted. The move to HD has allowed a new aspect ratio to be introduced in North America because the new resolutions demand new equipment. However, in Europe, the change to widescreen began in the 1990s. The UK is fully widescreen on all major broadcasts whether they are SD or HD.
unplug old cord...plug in new cord
I had the same problem recently with a Bush tv, my solution is scrap it and buy a new one. 72" is big though, if the tv is still in waranty take it back to the supplier. With your size of TV you might want to try sending it to a TV Repairer as it would be hard to repair but expensive to buy new.
An amplifier is a device that increases the strength of a signal. There are many, many different kinds of amplifiers, making many kinds of signals stronger. A stereo amplifier takes the tiny signal coming off of a music device, such as a radio tuner or an iPod, and amplifies it until it is powerful enough to cause the stereo speakers to make noise. A megaphone is just a cone with a hole in the tip that you can hold in front of your mouth, but it amplifies the sound waves coming from your vocal cords. Cable TV companies put amplifiers into their cable networks that amplify the TV signal, so that it doesn't fade away into static before it reaches your TV. In computer networking, we usually call them "repeaters". A repeater takes a packet that's travelled about as far as it can before it turns into static, amplifies it so it can be properly read, then makes a new copy and sends it down the next section of wire. HTH, Gdunge
i purchased a new video cassette player, it doesn't have external tuner, it says line in recorder, so how can i record from my tv?
It does have a digital tuner built in. This LCD TV has a built in digital tuner,so you can receive all digital broadcast.
Yes.
You will have to be more specific. If you have a new TV, the manual should be very explicit on how to use the USB. Each TV, and each USB manufacturer will have very specific instructions for non- plug and play devices.
Yes. The DVD player does,'t usually go through the tuner. The "new digital TV" just means that it has a digital tuner. This won't affect things like DVD players that don't use the antenna input.
Modern TVs are not generally "fixable". i.e. you don't replace the screen or the tuner, you get a whole new unit.
If you can still find a VCR they will all have the same picture.
Any television you buy new will come with a digital tuner.It's now required by the FCC.If you buy a second hand tv it probably won't have one,but if you have cable you're okay.
Yes, you can use the old antenna. However, some new antennas are specially designed to better capture digital TV signals. And the direction, angle, distance, and type of digital signals in your area could influence your choice of antenna. HDTV is a picture format, not a signal format. Most likely a TV with an HDTV picture format already has a digital tuner (ATSC) rather than only an analog tuner (NTSC). However, if it is just a monitor, then you may have to attach a tuner to it, or attach a tuner to your computer, and the computer to the monitor. Actually, there is no such thing as an "HDTV" tuner. There are analog and digital tuners. All HDTV is digital, but not all digital is going to be HDTV. In Feb 2009 the U.S. Government has mandated that all broadcasters will cease transmitting in analog format and begin transmitting their signals over the air in digital format only. This signal requires an ATSC type tuner (digital) to demodulate the digital signal and display it on your television screen. All TVs manufactured for use in the U.S. from 1 Jan 2006 must have an ATSC tuner. Older TVs with the older style NTSC tuner (analog) will require a converter box to demodulate the digital signals. More information about the upcoming changes to TV transmissions can be found here: www.dtv.gov === ===
Here's a way to find out. Go to your TV's menu and do a new channel search. If it comes up with channels like channel X.1 (which is usually for HDTV) then tune it in after the TV's done. If you can see it, chances are you have a digital tuner. If you can't, then the answer is that it doesn't.
on most new televisions it will have a rgb port for rgb cables which means you need a cable with 2 RGB sides and connect one to the computer and the other to the port on the back of the television.
It depends on what kind of TV you have (LCD plasma old new). television housing can be made from polystyrene like POLYSTYRENE IMPACT 6540.