well, every since my exotic dancer boyfriend left me its been hard(just like his ....) so ive ben watching a lot of tv. My dogs have been tellling me i should stop watching so much tv so i dresed themup as Hot Dogs... get it ;) God i miss antonio with all my vajay jay. ALso i wear sparkly uggs and khakis to work
They will all be included with your vcr that allows you to hook them up to the TV.
get a VCR player and hook up it by the back inputs
You can always hook it up to a VCR with composite cables and it'll work just fine.
Took hook it up the first thing u want to do just hook up the vcr to the tv then u want to put the red yellow and white plugs into the vcr the turn on the tv then turn on the vcr then turn on the x-box 360. make sure that u have your tv on the right channle such as channle 3 or change the tv input.
Coaxial
Your tv must have Picture in Picture to get that feature.You can hook up your vcr to use it though
Yes, the LG 42LH40 is compatible with VCR's of all kinds. It has the A/V jacks that are necessary to hook it up.
You will have to use RCA jacks for your VCR.In general you'll want to hook it up to an auxillary channel.The reason is that your VCR is only going to give you standard definition and you'll want to hook your HD TV up directly to an HD Sources.
hook up ur vcr to the projector with rca cables then pulg the cable into the vcr and then switch the vcr to screen mode
A VCR DVD combo player is typically hooked to a TV using RCA connectors. They are color coded and connected to the same ports on each device.
You'll need a VCR that already has a tuner (pref digital tuner in case your without cable) The VCR can select a channel and give an output on its RCA connectors, you can record using the VCR as a tuner. Pete
You don't want to do this. The VCR will make the video look like crap. Get something called an Audio-Video Switch. This is the best way to hook multiple devices to a tv. Also, DVD signal has a copy protection signal in it called Macrovision. You could go from the Xbox to the VCR then the TV using a device called a "Video Signal Stabilizer."