I have a huge tv with a lot of hookups and what i have found is that using optical hooked up to a surround sound system gives you that added little clarity that a true audiophile wants. and the hdmi with 1080p is your visual.
2007-12-09 03:12:06
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answer #1
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answered by mex99b1084 3
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nicely its now and returned no longer in elementary terms that straightforward. yet definite usually you may connect the output of the cable field to the abode theater receiver and then the hdmi output to the television. First you may desire to make useful the television settings are set wisely to different than a hdmi sign. additionally many cable field vendors don't have the hdmi ports energetic you're able to might desire to call your cable field service to activate the hdmi output. you besides might might desire to bypass into the settings to set the video outputs to show the sumptuous resolutions your television is able to showing. I even have seen to in lots of cases that human beings have it attached with factor or hdmi cables yet at the instant are not seeing a extreme definition photograph by way of settings no longer chosen genuine. So make useful the cable field is desperate wisely besides as your receiver, the enter of the television besides, and do your self a want and calibrate your television with a competent disc like that of the video necessities blu ray and you will incredibly see how sturdy HD fabric can seem. Kevin 40 years extreme end audio video expert
2016-11-14 04:42:19
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If you have a cheap DVD player, the six channel audio is the way to go, but if you have a DVD player that processes for full resolution HDMI, then run with it! Less processing is always better than more processing if the signal is equal, and analog six channel requires a lot of processing.
I really have a problem with avtruths.com when it comes to video. In the early days of HD circa 1997 - 2000, you could get component Y,cb,cr digital signals through a set of component cables but today the only thing left is Y,pb,pr, analog. If you have a CRT based television, then it's okay since they (picture tube based TVs) are analog.
Most people today have digital displays such as DLP, plasma, LCD, LCoS, etc... To get an HD signal from your DVD to your digital TV using component video, the signal must first suffer digital to analog conversion at the DVD player, then tollerate analog to digital conversion at the TV. Then the poor signal is going to have to go through a digital to analog conversion again since our eyes see analog.
It's a fundamental principal in electronics, when you add a component to your design (resistor, IC, capasitor) you take away a little of what you do want, signal, and add a little of what you don't want, noise.
A component cable is capable of handling the bandwidth of 1080p content, but the TV manufacturers do not design for it. If you use component video, you are maxed at 1080i.
2007-12-09 06:19:53
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answer #3
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answered by Pragmatism Please 7
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This will depend on you audio processor. If your receiver and or processor is newer and has the ability to decode HDMI audio than your set. Use the HDMI cable and your a Happy Camper.
If not send the HDMI to the display and us a Digital cable to the processor (IE Coaxial or Optical).
2007-12-09 03:00:58
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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The ONLY thing you'd need HDMI for is sending a 1080p signal to a 1080p capable HDTV. Otherwise, you can stick with your component cables. Click here to see why HDMI isn't always the best connection: http://www.avtruths.com/hdmi.html
As far as audio, if you don't have an HDMI capable receiver don't use optical or digital coax. Using the 5.1 Analog connection will sound MUCH better. Click the link to see how to do it: http://www.avtruths.com/uncompressed.html
2007-12-09 04:27:36
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answer #5
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answered by JSF 3
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