Quick TV crash course.

I have a 60 JVC DLP I will not tell you what I paid for it :D

It does only 1080I, but DTV broadcasts in that so HD looks great.
 
Good TV choice... like I said I like mine... be sure to get the HD tier with your cable/sat provider... makes all the difference in the world... to bad Charter has an issue with CBS (actually CBSwants to charge Charter for the use of the HD signal... Its free over teh air though)... so you can watch anything on CBS,,, But what really does CBS even offer?

Football in HD is amazing... so is.... well.. you know... :)
 
I called about hdtv and it's 13 bucks or 23ish with a dvr. I think I'll just do the 13 dollar one. My bill will go down because they kept upgrading me and my bill worked out to almost 180 bucks somehow from 120somthing.

For my other items, and until I get the HD upgraded, are component video cables just 3 rca cables or is there something special in them. I have a ton of high quality 3 wire a/v sets (the red/white/yellow).
 
the white and red run at a different ohm level than video cables but they will work and I would be willing to bet the average person wouldn't really notice it unless it was side by side.
 
Until you get your HD box, component cables won't really do anything for you. Try the composite cables.

When you get a new box it will come with an HDMI cable and probably component cables.

-Mike
 
Depends on the box you get Roy. Charter has an HD box that has component only, and one that is very hard to get that has HDMI.

Why is the best stuff always hard to get form them?
 
because its the worst company ever

come to think of it, I could say that about every cable company Ive ever had

I think when I join "real life" Im gonna get direcTV
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12480168#post12480168 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by mpcart
Until you get your HD box, component cables won't really do anything for you. Try the composite cables.

When you get a new box it will come with an HDMI cable and probably component cables.

-Mike

component over composite will make a large difference in picture quality even without HD even going back ten years to very basic dvd players it made large differences in quality. everything from completly getting rid of moray, to separation for beter detail.
 
Good point but SD is going to look horrible. I suppose horrible is better than really horrible.

Once I got HD I couldn't stand to watch anything in SD.


-Mike
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12482076#post12482076 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by mpcart
Good point but SD is going to look horrible. I suppose horrible is better than really horrible.

Once I got HD I couldn't stand to watch anything in SD.


-Mike

LOL I am definitely with you there, theres shows I quit watching when it wasn't in hd :lol:
 
I went to charter and picked up a box with both component and hdmi. They included about a pretty long hdmi cable too. Notice I've only been online about 5 minutes since then. I've been watching a bunch of stuff that I don't even know what the shows about, just looking at the pictures. :lol:

I had my whole home theater set up wrong anyway after tearing the entertainment center down. I was using composite on all my components that had component hookups. From what I read, composite can only do 480 although the processors do increase the quality but not that much. But I've been missing out on my dvd quality big time. My copies made for my own personal backups are stuck with svideo due to the descrambler/picture enhancer. I'm not sure but I don't think that goes quite as high quality but I don't know.

The new entertainment center and dining room (basement hang out/drinking) table is being delivered 9:30-1ish. I still need to get the wall painted before I slide the new center back to the wall. I got the carpets shampoo'd and dried out in the critical area's. Now I need to do the rest because there is a clean/dirty line showing real bad about 2 ft in front of where the new center will be.

I'm still debating picking up composite cables vs. using the high quaility r/w/y cables I was using before. I guess I'll go check out cable prices and see. Someone said walmart had good prices but ?? I also need a digital audio coax cable(looks similar to rca) so it can have a better signal for the surround, I think.
 
I don't know where you bought the new set, but you may want to look at the extended warranty (only if it will cover a new bulb). I picked up a DLP projector to use for classroom stuff from circuit city. Paid an extra $130. I think. But that gives me 4 years and includes the bulb (yes I called 2x to verify). Bulb alone for this thing is like $3-400. I can guarantee I will be having an "accident" right before my warranty is up so I can get a new bulb.:D
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12488302#post12488302 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by DrBDC
I went to charter and picked up a box with both component and hdmi. They included about a pretty long hdmi cable too. Notice I've only been online about 5 minutes since then. I've been watching a bunch of stuff that I don't even know what the shows about, just looking at the pictures. :lol:

I had my whole home theater set up wrong anyway after tearing the entertainment center down. I was using composite on all my components that had component hookups. From what I read, composite can only do 480 although the processors do increase the quality but not that much. But I've been missing out on my dvd quality big time. My copies made for my own personal backups are stuck with svideo due to the descrambler/picture enhancer. I'm not sure but I don't think that goes quite as high quality but I don't know.

The new entertainment center and dining room (basement hang out/drinking) table is being delivered 9:30-1ish. I still need to get the wall painted before I slide the new center back to the wall. I got the carpets shampoo'd and dried out in the critical area's. Now I need to do the rest because there is a clean/dirty line showing real bad about 2 ft in front of where the new center will be.

I'm still debating picking up composite cables vs. using the high quaility r/w/y cables I was using before. I guess I'll go check out cable prices and see. Someone said walmart had good prices but ?? I also need a digital audio coax cable(looks similar to rca) so it can have a better signal for the surround, I think.

You are making my head spin! :D Post a picture of the back of your audio receiver and your DVD player or provide model numbers of each of these. Maybe we can figure out what you need. Wiring these HD/audio systems can get a little confusing.

Also, I could hook up 100 AV systems with the piles of cables I have. If we can figure out what you need, I can bring some to work and you can pick them up if you want.

Cables at www.monoprice.com are 10% of wal-mart, best buy, etc and I'd hate to see you Pay $20 for a $2 cable. Especially since you may need a bunch.

By the way, don't get sucked in by the lure of a "high quality" digital cable. They all work the same.

-Mike
 
well if your worried that the composite cables (high quality ones you already have) used as component cables are not going to be good enough, then you are probably going to have to go somewhere other than walmart to find cables to do you.

To make it simple sounding...

audio cables are "SUPPOSED" to run at 50 ohm across the entire length of the cable. Video cables are supposed to run at 75 ohms. but the thing is on your average cable to even decent cable any and every bend or kink in that wire changes the load resistance so it is really no where near what it should be. the only way to get past it is to buy nice enough cables, they have to be Nitrogen gas interjected to always make sure the load stays the same.

I know long and boring but what I mean by it, unless you believe you will tell the small difference (some people have an eye for it including me), it's probably not worth an upgrade in those cables.

your Digital coax though is another story that is one where good cables make a night a day difference.

<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12489162#post12489162 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by mpcart


By the way, don't get sucked in by the lure of a "high quality" digital cable. They all work the same.

-Mike

Are you referring to cableS here??? WOW do you really believe that??? you seem like you know a decent amount about home audio and video it seems really surprising you don't believe in cables. I have near a 25,000 home audio video system and near 8 grand of it went into cables. The fact of the matter is your only as strong as your weakest link, and cables are always the weakest link.

what would happen if you tried to hook a garden hose up to a fire hydrant... Your tv might do X and your equipment puts out X but if you connect them with something to small and to low of quality it can only receive that signal
 
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Digital cables only transmit 1's and 0's and the expensive cables are no better at that than cheap ones. Analog signals can benefit from the Monster type cables but digital cannot.
 
Now to get more confusing, most my stuff also has digital fiber optic cables! I have down the basic hookup but want to make sure I can send to and from the right places.
 
Digital Fiber Optical works too. I prefer HDMI but not all components will have it. Always go digital over analog when possible.
 
coax is better than optic since optic is very sharp. but cable quality doesn't matter as much in optic and you can usally get cheaper
 
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