The red, green, and blue component video cables can be substituted for composite video + audio red, white, and yellow cables, as long as they are connected so that each cable matches the same color jacks on both ends.
Just plug yellow to yellow, and white to white. Yellow is video, red and white are stereo audio, but if you have no stereo input, you just use the white (i.e. mono). For some cables you use red instead of white, but this is rare. In some games, you can go into the settings and choose mono instead of stereo.
Make sure your AV cables (The red/white/yellow) are plugged in correctly, Red and White being the audio cables. If this doesn't work, get new AV cables or send your Wii into Nintendo.
The yellow, red and white Wii cables are the AV cables that send audio and video signals to the TV. On most TVs, these cables are to be plugged into matching red, white and yellow female connectors on the back, side or front of the TV.Then you engage an AV mode on the TV, or select the appropriate AV setting in the source or input menu. If there's more than one AV input, the connectors will be labelled with the name of the setting you should use.Note: On older TVs with only a yellow and white connector, you can either leave the red plug unconnected, or plug the red plug into the white connector and leave the white plug unconnected. Some of the audio will be missing, though.
There are special av cables that have a small, almost headphone connector plug-if not headphone connector- end opposite to the Red White and Yellow connectors.
Depends what kind of TV and XBox connector you are using. Yellow, Red and white are the most basic. Yellow is the picture, red and white are left/right audio (sound) channels. These are most commonly referred to as Composite. Then there is S-Video, Red and White. S-Video is 3/4 round, with the bottom having a raised edge. There are 4 pins (usually gold) and a black rectangle box. There are also the hookups for the HDTV, referred to as Component Cables, which include 5 cables. Red, Green, Blue, Red and White The first Red, Green, Blue are video; the 2nd red and white are audio.
They are RCA cables... Yellow is for Video, White is for Left Channel Sound (or Mono) and Red is for Right Channel Sound
In a set of cables with red, black (or white) and yellow cables, the yellow cable is a composite video cable.
Just plug yellow to yellow, and white to white. Yellow is video, red and white are stereo audio, but if you have no stereo input, you just use the white (i.e. mono). For some cables you use red instead of white, but this is rare. In some games, you can go into the settings and choose mono instead of stereo.
Monster Cables use Blue instead of White for the 2nd audio plug in RCA cables.
Make sure your AV cables (The red/white/yellow) are plugged in correctly, Red and White being the audio cables. If this doesn't work, get new AV cables or send your Wii into Nintendo.
They can be used for analog audio. White is always left audio. Yellow could be right, or could also be used for composite video.
Any TV that has input cables that are yellow red and white
The red, white and yellow cables are RCA audio and composite video. You can use any red and white audio cables for the audio side that you might use with a CD player or cassette deck, but the video cable should have some additional shielding on it, particularly for longer runs (more than 3 feet).
The yellow cable is the video. It plugs into the yellow video input jack. The white and red, or black and red cables are left and right audio. The connect to the audio in or out jacks.
The yellow cable can be used for the green wire, but cheap white/red/yellow (composite video + audio) cables will have issues working as component video cables for longer lengths, as they usually have poor shielding.
The colors of the RGB cable stands for several things. If your cable has one red, one white, and one yellow colored connector it is called a composite cable. The yellow connector is the video, while the white and red are the left and right audio cables.
as long as it has av component out outputs,(red,yellow,white cables) yes!