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.
The Bose 321 system does not support Hi-Def inputs, so the best idea is to use it just for sound. Connect the digital audio output of the Cable box to the optical input of the 321. Connect an HDMI cable from the Cable box to the TV directly.
If your tv has RCA out, use that. If not, you could use an external digital cable tuner and connect that to your soundbar .
The PS3 is capable of outputting video from its HDMI port, while at the same time outputting audio from the PlayStation AV port. You would connect anyPS2/3 AV cable that had stereo RCA outputs (the pair of red and white plugs), but you would not connect the video plug(s) of that cable (S-video, RGB plugs, or a yellow plug). You would leave the video connectors unplugged because you are using HDMI for video. But a better option would be to connect a cable from the PS3's optical audio port for surround sound. If your surround receiver has a digital optical audio input, use that. It will allow you to hear 5.1 channels of surround audio. The red and white RCA plugs can only support 2.0 channels of audio (stereo).
A 3.5 mm input is a line level signal, and a turntable has a phono level signal. You can connect these, but you will need a phono preamp to go in between the two. An RCA cable plugs into to the preamp from the turntable, and an RCA to 3.5mm cable connects the preamp to the stereo.
You can't. HDMI is digital. RCA is analog (component or composite).
The Sony PlayStation 3 requires a single electrical outlet to plug into. It is also connected to the TV and that also needs to be plugged into an electrical outlet. The cable that comes with the PS3 to plug into the TV is an A/V cable with 3 RCA type Plugs to Plug into your TV one for Video and Two for Audio and it has an HDMI plug to go into the PS3. Optional Component cable have 5 RCA type plugs to connect to HDTVs and the best HDTV connection is made with a HDMI cable. Another cable is plugged into the USB port and is used to connect the Dual Shock 3 Controller to the PS3 for charging with the Mini USB plug for the controller
With either the A/V cable that came with the PS3 that has 3 color coded RCA Style plugs for your TV or you can purchase an HDMI cable for the HDTVs
Depending upon the type receiver you have, 3 options are available for connecting the receiver to your TV. With the VIP 211, 211k, 222, 612 receivers, you can use a coax, RCA, component or HDMI cable to connect to your TV; HDMI giving you the highest quality picture if you have HD programming. The VIP 222k, 622, 722, 722k, and 922 receivers allow you to use RCA, component or HDMI cable (K series receivers and 922 have a coax port with OTA module installed). All other receivers can use the coax or RCA cables. Connect the type cable you have from your receiver to your TV. If you are using a coax cable, place your TV on channel 3 or 4. Any other type cable, you place your TV on an Input setting - HDMI for HDMI cable; comp for component cable; or Vid, AV, etc. for RCA cable.
Try to connect yellow into the green input while using red and white to the matching inputs. If this does not work, you may need a converter box sold about anywhere online RCA to digital/HDMi converter.
coaxial
Very very easy. does your DVD Player ( Home theatre ) have a HDMI cable? If it does, you can just buy an HDMi cable and connect it to Hdmi 1 on your tv and the other end to the Dvd Player and the sound a video will be very crisp. Alternatively, you can use an AV cable ( cable with yellow plugs on the end) and connect it to an AV output on your tv and DVD player. If you are using only the tv's sound this will work, but if you are using a amp,etc. you can connect 2 RCA cables to the tv and the amp for the sound.
Yes, but a component or HDMI connection will yield better picture and sound.
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.
The Bose 321 system does not support Hi-Def inputs, so the best idea is to use it just for sound. Connect the digital audio output of the Cable box to the optical input of the 321. Connect an HDMI cable from the Cable box to the TV directly.
The cable going from your receiver to your old TV, just remove it and connect to your new TV. Depending on the type cable you have to your receiver, if a coax you will put your TV on channel 3 or 4 (usually 3), any other type cable you will put the TV on an input setting. Just cycle through your inputs till you find a picture or a DISH Network message.
Composite RCA will be better than a coaxial cable (RG6). The order of quality and maximum resolution from best to worst is: HDMI (including HDMI 1.4 3D) DVI Component Video S-Video Composite Coaxial cable