Connecting your TV

Connecting a DVD player or satellite receiver and a VCR

This connection allows you to watch DVD/satellite, VCR, and TV programs, and record one TV channel while watching another channel.

You will need:

two coaxial cables (three if satellite receiver is used)

one set of standard A/V cables

one pair of audio cables

one S-video cable (between the TV and DVD player/satellite receiver)

Stereo VCR

 

 

 

VIDEO

AUDIO

 

 

 

 

L R

 

IN from ANT

OUT to TV

IN

From

 

CH 3

 

 

OUT

Antenna

CH 4

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TV

 

 

 

 

 

ANT( 75

)

 

 

ANT-1

OUT

DVI/HDCP IN

 

 

ANT-2

 

IN

VIDEO 1 VIDEO 2

COLOR

COLOR

STREAM

STREAM

 

HD-1

HD-2

S-VIDEO

Y

Y

 

AUDIO

 

 

 

R

L

 

PB

PB

 

 

VIDEO

 

 

OUT

AUDIO CENTER

 

PR

VIDEO

CHANNEL IN

 

 

L/

 

 

L/

 

MONO

 

L

MONO

L

 

 

 

AUDIO

AUDIO

AUDIO

AUDIO

VAR

AUDIO ON OFF

R

 

R

R

R

DVD Player

 

 

AUDIO

 

 

OUT

 

 

L

 

 

R

From

S-VIDEO VIDEO

OUT

OUT

Satellite

 

Satellite Receiver

Dish

 

 

 

 

 

AUDIO

 

 

OUT

 

 

L

 

IN from ANT

R

 

 

 

S-VIDEO VIDEO

 

OUT

OUT

Note:

For the highest possible picture quality from a DVD player or satellite receiver without component video or DVI/HDCP, use an S-video cable. (If your DVD player has component video, see page 11. If your satellite receiver has component video, see page 12. If your DVD plaer or satellite receiver has DVI/HDCP, see page 14.)

Do not connect both an S-video cable and a standard video cable between the TV and DVD player/satellite receiver at the same time or the picture performance will be unacceptable.

Do not connect the DVD player/satellite receiver and VCR to the same video channel on the TV. (See the illustrations, which show the DVD player/satellite receiver connected to Video-1 on the TV, and the VCR connected to Video-2 on the TV.)

The unauthorized recording, use, distribution, or revision of television programs, videotapes, DVDs, and other materials is prohibited under the Copyright Laws of the United States and other countries, and may subject you to civil and criminal liability.

10