If your cable box has a HDMI cable port, buy an HDMI cable to connect the TV to the cable box. The next best alternative is to use a S-Video cable with a pair of Audio cables. The third best alternative is to use a RF Coaxial cable. The last option is to use a composite Video and L/R Audio cables.
You should note that while the TV may be HD capable, the cable box may not support HD so you will have to upgrade your cable box to a HD compatible cable box.
I have had TWC cable and RR for many years. My TV has just broken down and I just recently purchased a 40 inch Sony Bravia HD TV! My TWC box has two wires to connect in and one wire going out to the TV! Can you explain or send me a diagram showing how to hook up my new TV? Having the two wires in and one out to the TV has many possibilities (one wire in, I believe, is for A stations and the other wire in is for B stations! ................................ Thank you for your time, HBBAUER2
It depends on the age of the television but the method is similar for new and old televisions.
The cable box will almost certainly have both an HDMI output and a composite video output (on three RCA connectors).
If the television has an HDMI input (it will be marked as "HDMI" on the input) then connect and HMDI cable from the box to the television. Older televisions don't have HDMI so the best connection will probably be composite video with separate audio links. These are three RCA connectors normally colored yellow, red and white.
If you have both connectors, use the HDMI as it provides far better quality in standard definition and is normally the only port that supports high definition, if the cable box and television handle HD of course.
A Cable box and TV are connected together through a RF cable.
You cannot hook up a hard drive directly to a cable box.
To hook it up to an HDTV, all you need is just an HDMI cable
If you have a lcd hdtv you can get a HDMI cord. Hook the HDMI cable up to your xbox 360 and the hdtv. Then take your AV cables and hook it up to your xbox 360 (to the back). And hook the (red and white) end to the back of your durabrand sub woofer.
no it is impossible to hook up cable to the projector, the only way is not hook a asr cable to the DVD out box and the take rst cable from the out cable hook into the in port on the projector in conclustion you need a DVD player also
No, projectors are not difficult to use. Just plug them in, hook up the audio/video cables to you cable box or computer, and press the power button on the projector to start it up.
You'll need a component cable or HDMI cable if you have a newer one. Any modern HDTV will accept both.
The website salon.com is the perfect website for your question. They have a detailed article on how to hook up your cable box. The article also tells you what cables you will need to get the job done.
Cable boxes do not usually have connections for computer monitors.
An HDMI cable connects from the Bell cable box to the surround receiver and then to the TV.
hey it is called calling the cable box company and asking them that is how I did it
The blu-ray instruction manual usually includes instructions for connecting the blu-ray to the HDTV, as well as how to program the blu-ray and HDTV to work together. The manuals are your best source of instruction. If the manuals are missing, you can usually download them from the manufacturer's website. The HDTV has several input connectors. Connect your cable box to one input, using a compatible cable (usually included), most often an HDMI cable these days. Connect your blu-ray HDMI output to another HDMI input on the HDTV using another HDMI cable. Then use the HDTV remote control to select the desired input source. If you want to use a blu-ray with speakers for your sound system, you must connect an HDTV audio output to a blu-ray audio input. Depending on the particular HDTV and blu-ray, you may use an audio cable with RCA connectors, or a fiber optic digital cable. If the HDTV and blu-ray both support a feature called ARC, the same HDMI video cable can also carry the digital audio signal. Refer to the manuals for setting up the HDTV and blu-ray audio.