There is no difference in the picture quality. You simply need to purchase the cable for the application that you have. If you have a normal Blu-Ray, HDTV and Cable or Satellite HD receiver, a HDMI 1.3 cable is the right type. For 3D televisions, purchase a 1.4 cable.
There is no truth in the statement. HDMI is an interface that carries digital audio and video signals. The image quality is dependent entirely on the quality and resolution of the signal that is delivered to the HDMI port by the video source. The HDMI connectors and cable carry that signal to the receiver but the cable does not change it in any way at all. DVI is compatible with HDMI other than the fact that there is no audio carried with the video signal. The video signal is identical to that carried by an HDMI cable and so this alone proves that statement to be false.
HDMI cable is characterized by its performance rather than the lay up of the individual cables. The choice of a specific wire gauge makes no difference to the effectiveness of the cable. An approved and licensed HDMI cable will work flawlessly if it connected to licensed HDMI outputs and inputs. On the same note, expensive HDMI cables cannot deliver better quality images than cheap ones. The nature of HDMI signals means that the signal is either properly received by a television or not. There is no gradual loss of quality before the signal fails.
It shouldn't since HDMI is a digital signal the cable shouldn't matter. I have seen $10 cables look the exact same as a $100 cable. But if its a really crappy manufacturer, I'm sure that the quality could be degrated. I would stick to some name brands. I have some Belkin cables that look outstanding that were only $8 on amazon.
Yes and No.If I understand the question correctly, you want to connect your cable box to your HDTV via HDMI, your DVR via component cable (Red, Green and Blue RCA connectors), and your VCR via component cables. Your HDTV should accept various video inputs - HDMI, component, and composite (the yellow RCA connector). Most argue that the HDMI connection will provide the best quality video. Next in quality is component video. Last is composite video. Your cable box may or may not have an HDMI connection. If it does and you subcribe to HD channels from your cable provider, then definitely use HDMI to connect to the cable box. If you have another HDMI input available on your TV, then connect it to the DVR (if the DVR has the HDMI output). Your VCR will likely have to be connected via composite cable. It's a crappy signal but VCR don't provide a great signal to begin with. Most VCRs only offer a composite (at best) output, anyway.
It is where you insert the HDMI cable for high quality...
HDMI gives a potentially higher signal quality than component video - but whether you will get higher picture quality depends on the quality of your input signal. Blu ray needs HDMI, but anything at 720i or lower will get by on component.
HDMI carries a digital signal. The quality of the cable is confirmed by passing certification tests set out by the HDMI organization. You will get the same image quality with a generic cable which cost 50 cents to make as you will with a Monster cable or any brand for that matter. Because HDMI is digital, as long as data is received and interpreted correctly, the quality will be identical regardless of the type of cable. There is no such thing as "more digital". More expensive cable may be more robust. If the cable will be connected and dis-connected on a regular basis, it might be wise to avoid the cheapest cables. If the cable is connected and left in place, as is the case in almost all homes, it is likely to last for many years regardless of the cost.
Cables To Go makes high quality HDMI cables that are just as good as higher priced brands such as Monster Cable.
An hdmi cable helps to project the best quality picture and sound. They outperform component cables and all new tvs are made with hdmi ready components built in to their sets.
There is no difference in the picture quality. You simply need to purchase the cable for the application that you have. If you have a normal Blu-Ray, HDTV and Cable or Satellite HD receiver, a HDMI 1.3 cable is the right type. For 3D televisions, purchase a 1.4 cable.
No, all HDMI cables are created equal and will give you the same high-definition quality regardless of price and there are many inexpensive HDMI cables; there is no reason to pay a lot for an HDMI cable.
Any HDMI cable should be 720p compatible. When running 1080p some low quality HDMI cables may have problems when longer than say 5 metres.
An hdmi cable helps to project the best quality picture and sound. They outperform component cables and all new tvs are made with hdmi ready components built in to their sets.
The sole purpose of an HDMI cable is to carry digital data from one device to another. Because the data is digital, the information received is identical to the information sent by the source. There is no difference in the image quality between any two HDMI cables. Therefore, a $1 HDMI cable will deliver the same image quality as a $200 HDMI cable. Although a more expensive cable is likely to have more robust connectors and a higher grade of cable, the end result is exactly the same as the least expensive. Any salesman telling you that the best quality is achieved with expensive HDMI cables is either lying or ignorant.
The best advantage to using a micro HDMI cable better quality and longer life usage if used properly. Micro HDMI provides advantages over the regular in that the quality of product delivered is far superior.
No there is notAdditional AnswerOnly in build quality. I have a cheap HMDI cable, and one of the terminals came apart. As far as signal quality is concerned, though, there is no difference.