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The screw for the coaxial cable input on my flat screen TV broke in half. I now cannot connect my cable TV box to my TV. When I posted in my local forum asking for TV repair places, someone posted this:
Correct me if I'm wrong but, can't you bypass the coaxial port by using a hdmi cable to connect cable box to tv?
Is this possible? Is the HDMI cable similar to how the coaxial cable is shaped (screw threads on the outside and 1 wire in the center)? Or is there some sort of adapter that can be used? TIA for any information!
HDMI ports are found on most HDTVs, and is available for use on several HD cable boxes. It provides both the audio and video connection on a single cable.
In addition to HDMI, you can also use a TV's analog connection systems (if provided):
* composite video connection (the yellow plug; lowest quality image)
* S-video connection (round plug with several tiny pins; 2nd best quality; these are being phased out but many slightly older TVs and cable boxes have them)
* component video connection (the blue/red/green plugs - this connection method provides the best picture & is the only one capable of transmitting hi-def images i.e. 720 and 1080 line images)
---> None of the connections above include an audio signal, so you will have to transmit the audio signal separately via the TV's red & white audio input plugs.
And you will be stunned at the improvement in the picture quality.
If you are using the coax out from your cable box, you are using the absolute worst possible output.
RGB - better
S-Video - better yet
Composite video - better yet
DVI - better yet
HDMI - best.
The correct order is:
HDMI-best, plus it carries audio and video on one cable, supports all the latest surround formats, has 2-way communication in some cases, and is the only connection that supports 1080P.
audio plus DVI video-seldom seen on source components for the home user
audio plus component video-used on everything HD before DVI or HDMI was available
audio plus RGB- I'm not positive where this falls in line with the other connections for non-pro gear but it is also seldom seen on modern video gear for the home user.
audio plus S-video-not much better picture quality than composite video, and the S-video connection is a common failure point.
audio plus composite video-most common on non-digital or HD components
coax-welcome to 1980. Mono audio, and video being passed through two tuners. The worst of all connections.
To be completely correct, except for S-video, the connection type isn't the issue. It's where the signal is coming from, how it is processed, and where it ends up on the TV (or the end of the signal path in any case).
audio plus RGB- I'm not positive where this falls in line with the other connections for non-pro gear but it is also seldom seen on modern video gear for the home user. . . . .
And that's how the movie studios like it. RGB, or what's known as 'component' input, can provide the same resolutions and clarity of HDMI, but its analog, which means no digital copy protection. Some studios have been lobbying for the right to require cable/sat providers to disable the component outputs of their equipment for certain channels, like HBO.
Quote:
Originally Posted by vmaxnc
To be completely correct, except for S-video, the connection type isn't the issue. It's where the signal is coming from, how it is processed, and where it ends up on the TV (or the end of the signal path in any case).
thanks for clarifying that . . . . i was about to make a "correction"!
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My *box* is connected to a modern TV, and has the (in)famous Yellow, Red, White line output and the HDMI output.
Once and a while, when hooked up with the HDMI cable, the warning comes up *Out of Range* ...
Then all I can do is hook it up via the Y,R,W line hook ups.
After a few days or so, I hook it up via the HDMI cable and it is all OK !
Any idea why this is ?
Do you subscribe to HDTV through your cable company? Is dependent on which channel you have selected?
When you turn on the TV, does it display the input and resolution briefly?
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