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Component interconnects
Hello
We have indulged in a large HD flatscreen LED. It has 3 x HDMI inputs and all will be occupied by Sky, Blu Ray and Playstation. The TV also has component inputs colored red, green and blue. We have an elderly and trusted Sony DVD player that also has component connections. The instruction booklet for the DVD player states that 100hz progressive output is possible from these connections and the LED TV instructions say the TV is "capable" of 100hz progressive. We would like to try it but are wary of expensive component interconnects as we are just experimenting. Is it OK to try with RCA audio interconnects of which we have plenty and they appear to be identical fitments. As long as we ensure the correct red green and blue connections between DVD player and TV it will be OK? TIA |
Component interconnects
"Gen" wrote in message ... Hello We have indulged in a large HD flatscreen LED. It has 3 x HDMI inputs and all will be occupied by Sky, Blu Ray and Playstation. The TV also has component inputs colored red, green and blue. We have an elderly and trusted Sony DVD player that also has component connections. The instruction booklet for the DVD player states that 100hz progressive output is possible from these connections and the LED TV instructions say the TV is "capable" of 100hz progressive. We would like to try it but are wary of expensive component interconnects as we are just experimenting. Is it OK to try with RCA audio interconnects of which we have plenty and they appear to be identical fitments. As long as we ensure the correct red green and blue connections between DVD player and TV it will be OK? TIA Yes, but video signals are a lot more fussy than audio; cheap cables could play havoc with picture quality - colour casts and the like. Me? I'm a film fan and like a *big* picture - this 6 foot wide image (TV recording 'Secret Mediterranean'): http://www.moirac.adsl24.co.uk/showntell/Saturation.JPG is on the smaller of my *two* cinema setups! :-) |
Component interconnects
"Gen" wrote in message
... Hello We have indulged in a large HD flatscreen LED. It has 3 x HDMI inputs and all will be occupied by Sky, Blu Ray and Playstation. The TV also has component inputs colored red, green and blue. We have an elderly and trusted Sony DVD player that also has component connections. The instruction booklet for the DVD player states that 100hz progressive output is possible from these connections and the LED TV instructions say the TV is "capable" of 100hz progressive. We would like to try it but are wary of expensive component interconnects as we are just experimenting. Is it OK to try with RCA audio interconnects of which we have plenty and they appear to be identical fitments. As long as we ensure the correct red green and blue connections between DVD player and TV it will be OK? TIA I'm not sure why you need to connect a DVD player, as Bluray players can also play DVDs. But if you really want to add the DVD player then yes, you can use your RCA interconnects. Theoretically you should use 75 ohm RCA cables for this, especially if you use 100Hz progessive as this requires a higher frequency response from the cables, but if you keep the leads as short as possible, say no more than 1.5m, you shouldn't find any noticable degradation when using reasonably decent audio cables. There is certainly no harm to be done by trying. David. |
Component interconnects
In article ,
Gen wrote: We would like to try it but are wary of expensive component interconnects as we are just experimenting. Is it OK to try with RCA audio interconnects of which we have plenty and they appear to be identical fitments. As long as we ensure the correct red green and blue connections between DVD player and TV it will be OK? For the sort of distances involved it probably won't matter. But you can buy proper video phono leads quite cheaply - or make them. However, you won't break anything by trying what you have. -- *I'm really easy to get along with once people learn to worship me Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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