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I have a top of the line Yamaha A/V receiver with component video or s-video output. Will it work be compatable with a new HDTV?

2006-11-22 09:40:24 · 8 answers · asked by BentFam 2 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

8 answers

YES YOU CAN CAUSE EVERY NEW HDTV COMES WITH 2 TO 4 DIFFERENT OUTPUTS ON THE BACK OF THE TV. PURPOSE IS FOR USERS TO STILL BE ABLE TO USE THIER OLD PRODUCTS ON THE NEW TV INSTEAD OF MAKING EVERYONE BUY A HIGH TECH A/V RECIEVER.

2006-11-22 09:52:08 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

For audio, and routing older video components to the TV, it will work fine. You won't be able to rout HDTV signals through the receiver though. If you want an all-in-one solution, you'll need a new receiver.

2006-11-22 09:49:38 · answer #2 · answered by Deirdre H 7 · 0 1

You dont have to use your receiver to route your video. Just connect all video straight to the tv and all the audio go to the receiver.

The purpose for HD connections on a receiver is to connect multiple components (cable box, sat receiver, dvd player, etc) to the receiver, and have one connection to the tv. The receiver acts as a video switcher.

2006-11-22 09:51:51 · answer #3 · answered by gandalf 4 · 0 0

It will be somewhat compatible if it has the logo Dolby Digital on it. But it will not upgradeable when you decide to get a new DVD player for HD to get the picture to go along with your HDTV.
In other words you do not have to replace your receiver now, but sometime in the future.

2006-11-25 01:48:25 · answer #4 · answered by coco2591 4 · 0 0

If 'Han' became into right here, he might grumble at you for no longer giving us the kind quantity for that Denon receiver. ingredient cables are completely ok for donning HD video. yet video engineers have a rule approximately all cables, connectors, switches: they could be designed for 3-4 situations the max frequency you ought to shove down the path. verify your Denon instruction manual. you desire to work out something approximately 'video frequency' being around ninety Mhz or above. this implies it may cope with HD video. If it basically has 12 Mhz bandwidth - the circuits have been designed for customary-def frequencies.

2016-12-10 13:59:40 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can route an HD signal through a component video cable.

2006-11-22 09:57:34 · answer #6 · answered by mrknositall 6 · 1 0

Yes it should work. The only problem is that it's not compatible with HDMI. That's seems to be where everything is heading these days.

2006-11-22 09:51:29 · answer #7 · answered by Kobe 4 · 0 0

no i dont think so

2006-11-22 09:41:43 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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