HDTV Question
#11
RE: HDTV Question
ORIGINAL: thndrlight
You CANNOT use S video or Composite(yellow) connections for HD. You need either component, DVI, HDMI. My projector is capable of only 1/4 HD and I currently use component cables and trust me, HD blows away regular tv or even DTV. Home Theater is my main hobby and what I spend most of my time doing. Depending on the length of you cables can really determine how expensive decent cables can be. Here is a link for a company that can custom make your length and are highly regarded in the Home Theater community. Monster cables are a rip off for the money btw.
http://www.bluejeanscable.com/store/component/index.htm
You CANNOT use S video or Composite(yellow) connections for HD. You need either component, DVI, HDMI. My projector is capable of only 1/4 HD and I currently use component cables and trust me, HD blows away regular tv or even DTV. Home Theater is my main hobby and what I spend most of my time doing. Depending on the length of you cables can really determine how expensive decent cables can be. Here is a link for a company that can custom make your length and are highly regarded in the Home Theater community. Monster cables are a rip off for the money btw.
http://www.bluejeanscable.com/store/component/index.htm
YEP.....
Also...Some HDTVs to come with a tuner...mine did....but most do not. Mine is connected via component cables, generally that is the best connection to use.
#12
RE: HDTV Question
Thanks for you help guys.. I have just seen some connectors that look like a printer hookup almost.. and know those are for HDTV, but wasnt sure if the "Y Pb Pr" connectors also work, or if they would downgrade the quality of signal
#13
RE: HDTV Question
ORIGINAL: thndrlight
You CANNOT use S video or Composite(yellow) connections for HD. You need either component, DVI, HDMI. My projector is capable of only 1/4 HD and I currently use component cables and trust me, HD blows away regular tv or even DTV. Home Theater is my main hobby and what I spend most of my time doing. Depending on the length of you cables can really determine how expensive decent cables can be. Here is a link for a company that can custom make your length and are highly regarded in the Home Theater community. Monster cables are a rip off for the money btw.
http://www.bluejeanscable.com/store/component/index.htm
You CANNOT use S video or Composite(yellow) connections for HD. You need either component, DVI, HDMI. My projector is capable of only 1/4 HD and I currently use component cables and trust me, HD blows away regular tv or even DTV. Home Theater is my main hobby and what I spend most of my time doing. Depending on the length of you cables can really determine how expensive decent cables can be. Here is a link for a company that can custom make your length and are highly regarded in the Home Theater community. Monster cables are a rip off for the money btw.
http://www.bluejeanscable.com/store/component/index.htm
#15
RE: HDTV Question
DVI is the best (it's the one that "looks like a printer hookup almost"). If not that, there are other types, such as IEEE 1394 (Firewire), but you probably won't have those if you don't have DVI. After that, component (red, green, blue) would be the one to use.
As for tuners, most cable companies have a box you can rent for about $10 a month and will continually upgrade it for no extra charge. These generally have DVI or any other format you would want, but it gets more complicated if you like to run everything through a receiver like I do. You could still use DVI though, just not through the receiver. Depends on your setup really. Oh, and HDTV will be carried by your coaxial cables (antenna would degrade the signal). Good luck, and let me know if I'm confusing.
As for tuners, most cable companies have a box you can rent for about $10 a month and will continually upgrade it for no extra charge. These generally have DVI or any other format you would want, but it gets more complicated if you like to run everything through a receiver like I do. You could still use DVI though, just not through the receiver. Depends on your setup really. Oh, and HDTV will be carried by your coaxial cables (antenna would degrade the signal). Good luck, and let me know if I'm confusing.
#17
RE: HDTV Question
in order to view true hd you can only use the following cable types, component, DVI, or HDMI. Composite and S video are not HD but will work with hd devices. HDMI is the newest and best technology, then DVI. There is no difference in picture quality but HDMI is also able to carry uncompressed sound through the same cable. Both HDMI and DVI are uncompressed video (it stays in digital format). DVI with a seperate optical cable for sound is similiar to hdmi.
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