CONNECTIONS

There are different types of audio and video connections used to connect the receiver, the speakers, the video display, and the source devices. The Consumer Electronics Association has estab- lished the CEA® color-coding standard. Some of these connectors are not used on the AVR 1600, although they may be found on other components in your system. See Table 1.

Table 1 – Connection Color Guide

Audio Connections

 

 

 

Left

 

Right

 

Front (FL/FR)

 

White

 

Red

 

Center (C)

 

 

Green

 

 

 

Surround (SL/SR)

 

Blue

 

Gray

 

 

Surround Back (SBL/SBR)

 

Brown

 

Tan

 

Subwoofer (SUB)

 

 

Purple

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Digital Audio Connections

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Coaxial

 

 

Orange

 

 

 

Optical

 

Input

Output

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Video Connections

 

 

 

 

 

 

Component

Y Green

Pb

Blue

Pr Red

 

Composite

 

 

Yellow

 

 

 

S-Video

 

 

 

 

 

HDMIConnections (digital audio/video)

HDMI

Speaker Connections

Speaker cables carry an amplified signal from the receiver’s speaker terminals to each loudspeaker. They contain two wire conductors, or leads, inside plastic insulation, that are differentiated in some way, such as with colors or stripes.

The differentiation preserves polarity, without which low-frequency performance can suffer. Each speaker is connected to the receiver’s speaker-output terminals using two wires, one positive (+) and one negative (–). Always connect the positive terminal on the speaker, which is usually colored red, to the positive terminal on the receiver, which is colored as indicated in the Connection Color Guide (Table 1). The negative terminals are both black.

 

 

 

The AVR 1600 uses binding-post

 

 

 

speaker terminals that can accept

+

banana plugs or bare-wire cables.

 

 

 

Banana plugs are inserted into the

 

 

 

 

 

 

hole in the middle of the terminal

 

 

 

 

 

 

cap. See Figure 1.

 

 

 

 

Figure 1 – Binding-Post Speaker Terminals With Banana Plugs

Bare wire cables are installed as follows (see Figure 2):

1.Unscrew the terminal cap until the pass-through hole is revealed.

2.Insert the bare end of the wire into the hole.

3.Hand-tighten the cap until the wire is held snugly.

1

2

3

Figure 2 – Binding-Post Speaker Terminals With Bare Wires

Subwoofer

The subwoofer is dedicated to the low frequencies (bass), which require more power. To obtain the best results, most speaker manufacturers offer powered subwoofers that contain their own amplifier. Usually, a line-level (nonamplified) connection is made from the receiver’s Subwoofer Output to a corresponding jack on the subwoofer, as shown in Figure 3.

Although the purple subwoofer outputs look similar to full-range analog audio jacks, they are filtered to allow only the low frequencies to pass. Don’t connect these outputs to any other devices.

Preout Subwoofer

Figure 3 – Subwoofer

CONNECTING SOURCE DEVICES TO THE AVR

Audio and video signals originate in “source devices,” including your Blu-ray Disc or DVD player, CD player, DVR (digital video recorder) or other recorder, tape deck, game console, cable or satellite television box or MP3 player. The AVR’s tuner also counts as a source, even though no external connections are needed, other than the FM and AM antennas and the SIRIUS tuner module.

Separate connections are required for the audio and video portions of the signal, except for digital HDMI connections. The types of connections used depend upon the capabilities of the source device and video display.

Audio Connections

There are two types of audio connections: digital and analog. Digital audio signals are required for listening to sources encoded with digital surround modes, such as Dolby Digital and DTS, or for noncompressed PCM digital audio. There are three types of digital audio connections: HDMI, coaxial and optical. Do not use more than one type of digital audio connection for each source device. However, it’s okay to make both analog and digital audio connec- tions to the same source.

NOTE: HDMI signals may carry both audio and video. If your video display device has an HDMI input, make a single HDMI connection from each source device to the AVR. Usually, a separate digital audio connection is not required. Turn the volume on your television all the way down.

Digital Audio

The AVR 1600 is equipped with three HDMI (High-Definition Multimedia Interface) inputs, and one output. HDMI technology enables digital audio and video information to be carried using a single cable, delivering the highest quality picture and sound.

The AVR 1600 uses HDMI (V.1.3a with Deep Color) technology and is capable of processing both the audio and video components of the HDMI data, minimizing the number of cable connections in your system. The AVR 1600 implements Deep Color, which increases by an order of magnitude the shades of color that can be displayed, and the latest lossless multichannel audio formats, including Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio.

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Harman-Kardon AVR 1600 owner manual Speaker Connections, Subwoofer, Connecting Source Devices to the AVR, Audio Connections