Connecting VHF and UHF Antennas

If your antenna has a set of leads that look like this, see “Antennaswith300ΩFlatTwin
Leads” below.
If your antenna has one lead that looks like this, see “Antennaswith75ΩRoundLeads”.
If you have two antennas, see “Separate VHF and UHF Antennas”.

Antennaswith300ΩFlatTwinLeads

Ifyouareusinganoff-airantenna(suchasaroofantennaorrabbitears)thathas300Ω
twin flat leads, follow the directions below.
1. Place the wires from the twin leads under the screws on a 300-75 Ω adapter (not supplied).
Use a screwdriver to tighten the screws.
2. Plug the adaptor into the ANT IN terminal on the back of the TV.

Antennaswith75ΩRoundLeads

Plug the antenna lead into the ANT IN terminal on the back of the TV.

Separate VHF and UHF Antennas

If you have two separate antennas for your TV (one VHF and one UHF), you must
combine the two antenna signals before connecting the antennas to the TV. This
procedure requires an optional combiner-adaptor (available at most electronics shops).
1. Connect both antenna leads to the combiner.
2. Plug the combiner into the ANT IN terminal on the bottom of the back panel.

Connecting Cable TV

To connect to a cable TV system, follow the instructions below.

Cable without a Cable Box

Plug the incoming cable into the ANT IN terminal on the back of the TV.
Because this TV is cable-ready, you do not need a cable box to view unscrambled cable
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channels.

Connecting to a Cable Box that Descrambles All Channels

1. Find the cable that is connected to the ANT OUT terminal on your cable box.
This terminal might be labeled “ANT OUT”, “VHF OUT” or simply, “OUT”.
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2. Connect the other end of this cable to the ANT IN terminal on the back of the TV.
Connections
Continued...
English - 10
ANT OUT
ANT IN
ANT IN
UHF
VHF
ANT IN
ANT IN
UHF
VHF
ANT IN
ANT IN
BN68-850_Eng.indb 10 2009-06-18 �� 3:55:07