English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have a Philips 5 speaker surround sound st, that came with a DVD player, however, I want not only the DVD player, but the TV and my son's Xbox 360 to hook up to the system.

How would I go about doing this?

I think I need some sort of consolidator box that they can all plug into, but I don't know what I should get.

2007-10-14 07:49:38 · 2 answers · asked by Sandi B 1 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

2 answers

Most receivers, even ones in a box, have several extra inputs on the back for CD, TV/DBS, etc. You should run video straight to the TV, and audio to the back of the Philips receiver.

If all the devices (xbox, DVD player, CATV box) have optical outputs, and the Philips box only has 1 optical input, you can buy a Toslink Optical switch for about $20. This can handle the audio. (Search for "Toslink Switch").

If you want to feed audio & video to the Philips unit and let it feed the TV, you may be out of luck. In general a HTIB (Home Theater in a Box) cut some corners and having all types of cross-connections or video up-converting is one of the things you do not get. This is why I suggest you feed video straight to the TV and audio straight to the Philips unit.

2007-10-14 12:10:17 · answer #1 · answered by Grumpy Mac 7 · 1 0

Are you utilizing a committed centre speaker for the actors' communicate? if you're, possibly there'sa situation with the centre channel lodspeaker. one thanks to envision will be to unplug the centre speaker and attempt putting your processor to phantom centre (if it has this style of putting). this may chop up the centre channel between both the front significant audio gadget. If the fuzziness disappears, you may discover that between the speaker drivers on your centre speaker is unsuitable and could opt for replacing. as the different reply suggested too, make sure all yourconnections are strong besides. in case you play your gadget at extreme quantity stages (no longer a robust idea, because it would want to correctly reason everlasting listening to damage) you may discover you're overloading your centre speaker.

2016-10-21 03:51:28 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers