Introduction
Connecting
your TV
Using the
Remote Control
Setting up
your TV
Using the TV’s
Features
Appendix
Index
8
Connecting your TV
Note: One IR blaster cable is provided with your TV. No other cables are
provided.
Coaxial cable is the type of cable connected to your antenna, cable TV
service, or cable converter box. Coaxial cable has “F” connectors.
Standard stereo A/V cables usually come in sets of three, and are
typically color-coded according to use: yellow for video, red for stereo
right audio, and white for stereo left (or mono) audio. Your TV’s standard
A/V inputs are color-coded in the same manner as the cables.
S-video cable is for use with video equipment that has an S-Video
connector.
Component video cables come in sets of three (typically color-coded
red, green, and blue), and are for use with video equipment that has
component video connectors. Your TV’s ColorStream
®
(component video)
inputs are color-coded in the same manner as the cables.
Digital audio cable is for use with video equipment that has digital
audio output (e.g., a DVD player or game console). You can use either
optical or coaxial digital audio input (see pages 14, 53, and 57).
DVI-D digital single-link cable is for use with video equipment that has
a DVI-D digital single-link connector (see page 15).
PC video cable (D-sub 15-pin) is for use with a computer that has a
D-sub 15-pin connector (see page 18).
IR blaster cable is used to remotely control other A/V equipment
(equipped with an an infrared sensor) through the TV (see page 16).
NOTE REGARDING PICTURE QUALITY
When connecting video equipment to your Toshiba TV:
For GOOD picture quality: Use a standard stereo A/V (yellow)
video cable.
For BETTER picture quality: If your equipment has an S-video
connector, use an S-video cable instead of a standard yellow video cable.
(You still must connect the standard red and white audio cables for full
system connection, but do not connect a standard yellow video cable at
the same time or the picture performance will be unacceptable.)
For BEST picture quality: If your equipment has component video
connectors, use component video cables instead of a standard yellow
video cable or an S-video cable (plus the standard red and white audio
cables for full system connection.) If your equipment has a DVI-D
digital single-link connector, use a DVI-D cable (plus standard red
and white audio cables connected to the audio terminals labeled
“For DVI/HDCP IN” for full system connection).
Component video cables
(typically color-coded red, green, blue)
Coaxial (antenna) cable
Standard stereo A/V cables
(typically color-coded yellow for video,
red and white for audio)
S-video cable
CAUTION:
Do not plug in any power cords until you have
finished connecting all equipment.
Digital audio cable
DVI-D digital single-link cable
PC video cable (D-sub 15-pin)
IR blaster cable
Optical
Coaxial
57HLX82(E)08-18 10/29/02, 10:28 AM8