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(I'm speaking of the wires that help connect the DVD player to the TV)

2007-12-14 08:49:44 · 4 answers · asked by G D 1 in Consumer Electronics Home Theater

4 answers

Yes, A/V cables work with anything as long as they'll plug in....

2007-12-14 09:01:57 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

connect the element video cables up as wide-spread. Then only use the pink and white cables out of your composite cable. The yellow cable is the composite video cable. The pink and white cables are used for stereo audio and are the same for composite and element video. be effective all 5 cables are plugged into the same cluster belonging to the same output on the DVD participant, and enter on the television. additionally, make sure you do no longer confuse the pink video cable and the pink audio cable. i've got achieved that some circumstances, and it reasons strange issues to take place. surely, there is not any longer plenty distinction between the relatively cables themselves. Copper is copper. element video cables could bypass extremely greater tolerances, yet it relatively is it. Realistically, a sturdy set of composite video and audio cables could be utilized for an element video sign, or digital coax audio sign, or something that demands a RCA connector.

2016-12-11 04:52:14 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

As long as 2 DVD players have the same connectors, the cables should transfer. But not all DVD players have the same connectors.

- Some DVD players have 2 kinds of DD output: Optical and coaxial-digital.

- Some DVD players only have 1 DD output and it seems to be optical.

2007-12-14 09:27:10 · answer #3 · answered by Grumpy Mac 7 · 0 2

They are usually pretty standard cables, so yes.

2007-12-14 09:01:48 · answer #4 · answered by Agent Feyd 4 · 0 2

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