The Cables Unlimited 5" will work on any TV with RCA or S-Video inputs. Most televisions made in the last 15 years have RCA inputs.
The first television to feature RCA inputs was the RCA Model 630-TS, released in 1946. This model was notable for its innovative design and was among the first to use the now-standard RCA connectors for audio and video, which greatly improved connectivity for external devices. The introduction of RCA inputs marked a significant advancement in television technology, allowing for better integration with various audio and video equipment.
You can't. HDMI is digital. RCA is analog (component or composite).
Video is picture and audio is the sound. Home theater receivers have RCA composite or component, S-Video or HDMI for the video input, and RCA analog, Toslink (optical) or coaxial inputs for digital audio.
Simply plug your camera feed directly into the input of the DVR system. These will be either RCA or BNC inputs. If your camera feed is a different format from the DVR's input, simply use an RCA-to-BNC adapter or a BNC-to-RCA adapter.
If you TV has output connection, then you can get cables to connect your TV to your projector. For example I have a TV with RCA video and audio outputs, I use 3 RCA cables and then I connect them to my RCA inputs into my projector. My projector has a small speaker, so most of the time I just connect the video cable.
Pico projectors are great. Like most of the elecrontics today that have to carry a video signal the most common inputs are A/V (RCA), VGA (laptop), and now HDMI.
No, niether RCA input or outputs
S-Video to RCA jacks cost around 13 dollars.If you prefer you can use a video switch,a little box used to switch between video sources.You just put the S-video in one of the inputs and the RCA jacks in the output,select the right button and you're good to go.
Yes if it has RCA A/V inputs
No
video formats for rca dvd players