With analog cable and receivers, no. With the use of HD cable receivers, the first sign of a bad splitter is audio dropouts. You should check to make sure that the splitter is rated for a bandwidth of at least 900MHz for digital cable. Changing out the splitter is very easy and cheap, so you should try to replace it and see if the problem goes away.
check your surround sound if it has an HDMI or AV input jacks. if it has, then you are good to go. from your satellite receiver, attach the HDMI cable or AV cable. connect it to your surround sound. after connecting the satellite receiver box and surround sound, attach the HDMI or AV cable from the surround sound to your television.
An HDMI cable connects from the Bell cable box to the surround receiver and then to the TV.
No, you will need a surround sound receiver or amplifier with 5 speakers and a subwoofer to hear surround sound.
Find the audio-out port on the back of your PC or side of your laptop (usually a green marker with a picture of headphones or sound waves), and plug in headphones or speakers. If you only have the white and red stereo cables, head over to a wal-mart and buy a "Y-Splitter" so that it will fit into the computer and plug your stereo cables into the splitter.
The optical cable would be the best choice.
A splitter valve has a blow off valve sound but it redirects the airflow. It combines the features of a diverter valve and blow off in one housing.
a changed printer cable
Car audio connectors may cause sound problems if they are not hooked up correctly. The sound may not be clear or there may be no sound at all. Check the manual which came with the connectors to make sure they are hooked up properly.
not sure if it does just switch back to scart
it could be the sterio signal is unreliable, i had this with a cable tv set up when taking the sound out a nicam sterio vcr, after some months of shouting at the cable supplier they fixed the sound issues and replaced them with picture problems instead,
Yes, if you have a splitter.
You can bridge mono amps with a splitter, but the sound quality may suffer a tiny bit.
No. As long as the cable is the correct gauge for your speaker load, there is no difference in sound between expensive cable and "zip" cord.
An audio cable alone can not cause a DELAY in the sound. We're not into answering test questions here. That is cheating. This question has been asked several times.
Cable has a long "a" and a schwa sound.
No
yes