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Why are there so many sorts of connecting cables? Find out with this quick guide.
The connectors on each cable are called plugs (and are also called male) and they will usually fit only into one sort of socket (or female connector).
Most cables you will come across are male to male. Occasionally you will find leads with a socket on one end and a plug on the other, and these are called "extension cables".
SCART
The SCART cable is used to connect a set-top box to a television set, or to a video recorder. This can only be a short cable. The SCART cable carries all of these types of signal:
As stereo sound, RGB picture and widescreen signal is the best possible combination for digital television viewing, it is vital to use a SCART lead between any set-top box and the main television.
The composite video picture with stereo sound is the best combination for a VHS video recorder. If your set-top box has two SCART sockets, it is likely that the one marked TV will carry RGB picture information and the other will not.
If your television has more than one SCART input, you may need to choose a special one (marked RGB) if you want to use RGB from the SCART cable.
On most set-top boxes it is possible to turn the RGB output on and off. This can be used to test the RGB input function on the television ? the picture quality appears blurred when it is disabled.
If have a DVD player, rather than a VHS recorder, you can attach this to the set-top boxes second SCART connector. The signal from the set-top box will normally be overridden by the DVD player when it is on, usually in high-quality RGB.
Some very cheap SCART cables do not have all the pins connected. They may not provide RGB and widescreen picture signals. SCART cables are normally no more than three metres in length.
UHF lead
The UHF lead is a lead that you would traditionally associate with television signals. They can carry:
up to 45 (but normally only five) analogue television channels
You can't avoid these cables if you are going to use Freeview, as these cables are the only ones that you can use to distribute Freeview signals around the house.
Where you have an integrated digital television (an idTV) you just need to get the signal from the aerial to the television with one of these cables.
If you are using a Freeview set-top box, you will need to get the signal from the aerial to the set-top box using this aerial lead, but for best results connect the TV to the box with a SCART cable.
You can also use a UHF lead to connect a set-top box to a television somewhere in the house. Your set-top box will require a RF (radio frequency) modulator. Note that "RF passthough" is another way of saying there is no modulator. You will be able to "tune" the second television into the picture showing on the set-top box.
Some boxes (all Sky boxes) have the ability to connect a remote control receiver to the second TV end of the interconnecting cable, so you can change channels.
The set-top boxes, whilst providing a reasonable quality picture to the second TV, will always provide only mono sound via a UHF lead.
The step-change in picture quality obtained by switching to RGB on a SCART is far greater than any obtained though spending any more on a gold-plated SCART cable.
Satellite or cable TV cable
These cables are usually very stiff, and have a very basic screw connector on the end. Usually they will provide an unbroken link to the satellitedish. At the dish end they plug into the device on the end of the arm, the LNB.
Don't try to disconnect these cables when the set-top box is on. Usually there is a small voltage that will cause dangerous sparks.
If the cable connects to a satellite dish, there is not much you can do with the cable. Each receiver in the set-top box needs it's own wire to the LNB. With a personal video recorder (such as Sky+), or a multi-room installations there are two cables to the four-output LNB on the dish. If you want more rooms, each will require it's own cable.
If the cable is providing cable TV, then it is possible to use inexpensive "Y connectors" to link the incoming signal to various set-top boxes, cable modems, or - via an adaptor - directly to the back of a TV.
Composite video cable
This is the most simple and basic video connection you can get. It carries:
a single picture from a set-top box
The picture will be in colour, and of comparable quality to a analogue broadcast station. However, there is no sound. For that reason this cable is often found joined to a stereo audio cable.
These signals are quite robust and can be carried for many metres. Often modern television sets have a single yellow photo input on their front input panel.
You also use an identical cable to carry digital stereo (SPDIF) sound.
Stereo audio cable
These cables carry the left and right channels of sound on two joined cables. They are usually required when a SCART cable is not being used, as the SCART cable already carries stereo sound.
If you are connecting your set-top box to an external stereo system, a separate stereo audio is used.
There is no real practicable limit to the length of these cables, but excessive length will degrade the quality of the signal.
S-video cable
The S-video standard is not well supported by most UK digital TV boxes, and very few have a S-video socket. If you need one for a particular analogue camcorder, use it, but avoid S-video with digital television. If you are using what appears to be a monochrome picture from a SCART lead, it will certainly by an incomplete S-Video signal and you should change to the RGB input.
VGA cable
This is the cable you will use to connect a computer to a old style monitor, and some modern LCD screen too. Most modern LCD TVs will have a VGA input too.
If you want to connect a set-top box to a LCD monitor, you can buy a conversion box from around 60. However this will not result in a better picture than using an existing SCART socket if there is one.
The only way to get higher than normal television resolution is to use a VGA in conjunction with a personal computer or modern games console.
DVI cable
If you want to get the very best out of a television or monitor use a digital video interconnect (DVI) cable.
This will be the only way for most televisions and monitors to receive high-definition pictures from a computer, and some set-top boxes.
If you can use either a VGA cable or a DVI cable, choose the DVI option.
HDMI cable
If you want to get the very best out of a television use a HDMI cable.
This will be the only way for most televisions to receive high-definition pictures from set-top boxes.
Your comments are always welcome. Please use the form below to add your thoughts or questions to this page. We will get back to you as soon as we can.
Nigel Moreton Sunday 5 June 2011 8:44PM
Thanks for that! I find the whole thing very frustrating because when I bought the tv some 5 years ago, I was advised then to buy a tv that was 'HD Ready' as it was the thing to come. Now, my local transmitter has started transmitting HD channels, I've bought a Freeview HD- and it doesn't work!! I'll wait a little longer now til I need to update the tv. Annoying. Cheers, Nigel
Feela bit miffed really- it was sold as 'HD Ready' and has those words printed on the set itself! I bought it about 5 years ago so I suppose its a bit late to take it back now- although it is 'unfit for purpose'!!
Hi I am trying to find an answer to cable direction.
I have a TV with scart connection and I would like to connect my DVD to S video.
So, my question is what cable do I need, a scart to s video or a s video to scart. Assuming that the cable is Not bi-directional.
We have moved house and have lost the instruction manual for our phillips pace digibox and are having difficulty getting a picture maybe we are setting it up wrongly. can you help please?
Shane Barron: Hi If you have internet you can download the manual for the pace digibox. There is a Pace site available with free manual downloads, although you may have to try a few sites all labeled Pace, Try pace.com.uk to start. Good luck Don
just installed skyhd set box through hdmi lead, bought a hdmi selector and connected a dvd/ vcr recorder through hdmi also, can anyone twll me how to connect them so that i can get the sky through the recorder for recodring purposes please???
Not 100% sure but I think you have to connect your Skybox to your DVD/VCR via the Scart connections and also connect from your DVD/VCR to your TV via Scart. You will be able to record through one of the AV channels although I don't know if you will be able to record a different channel to the one you are watching or tuned into.
I have a Samsung LCD tv which has 3 HDMI inputs and only one scart. I linked the TV to a recordable DVD via scart, and a V+ box to the DVD. The RF arial is connected from the wall to DVD up to TV.
When I connect the ariel directly to the TV the picture quality is superb. However, when I connect the ariel via the DVD, it lacks quality on the freeview both on DVD and freeview on the TV, as does the picture sharpness when I watch the V+ box (via the DVD AV2).
When I bypass the DVD and connect the V+ directly to the TV the quality is much better.
How do I get a good picture quality with no interference when connecting with a DVD?
Is this due to poor quality leads?
Should I purchase an HDMI cable to connect the DVD to the TV and the V+ to the TV directly? Would this affect my ability to record from the V+ box?
Hi, I am a senior, I have virgin cablebox {vcr with analogue tuner music center, sony recorder, tv.
We have been switched to dg 15th june, previously I was getting all freeview programs, but now only one group, would the music center {analogue tuner} be stopping other freeview chanels , or is there another solution to receive all channels as before switch over.
I can get all chanels if I plug ariel direct to tv so it appears a loop poblem can you advise, thank you.tom.
Hi, Alice here again. I have now connected my DVD recorder to the TV using an HDMI cable, and connected the V+ box with an HDMI cable to the TV. I then connected via Scart, the V+ box to the DVD recorder. I bought a new RF ariel lead which has solved the picturequality problem.
I have set up the V+ box to be in HD which is great.
However, I am wondering now how to record V+ HD onto DVD. The DVD will not record the HD broadcast on the TV setting. It will record what I'm watching on V+ via the AV2 channel on the DVD. BUT... not in HD quality.
Is there any way around this?
Am I able to record HD V+ in HD using my HD-ready DVD recorder?? I guess not as it's connected via Scart... but I just wondered if there's any way the DVD can pick up the HD signal via the TV, as the picture quality appears great on normal TV, but poor in comparison via the DVD AV channel.
Alice: You havent mentioned what model of Samsung DVD recorder you are referring to, (R135?) but it should be pointed out that just because it has an HDMI socket doesnt mean it can actually record in HD, as the HDMI socket is only an output to enable up-scaling of a normal recording, and not for for the input of an HD signal.
Maybe you could confirm (or not) the model number.
tom munro: If you can get all channels with the aerial plugged directly into the TV, then that means that doing it via the music centre or whatever is reducing the signal level to below what the TV can operate on.
The analogue tuner will not have any effect as far as the problem you mentioned is concerned.
hi folks im wallace. im having trouble linking standardsky, free view through a booster and then distributing the signals to other rooms.im happy putting sky on down stairs and watching it upstairs but iv no sound is there any sites you are aware of posting wiring maps
wallace douglas: You really have to first of all make sure that coupling the co-ax connectors together (normally fitted into the Skybox) actual does gives good reception in the other rooms before linking them through the Sky box.
If they do, but not when the Sky box is added, then that can indicate that the Sky boxes RF outputchannel chosen for feeding the other rooms is clashing with the channels being received.
You havent mentioned your location so advice cannot be given on a suitable channel to use.
Remember of course that the Sky boxes RF output is analogue and not digital, so the TV's in other rooms will have to be set on an analogue scan to receive the Sky box.
Alice: Thanks for the info, and which unfortunately confirms what I suspected, insomuch that the HDMI socket is purely an output for up-scaling purposes of normal DVD's etc, as the device itself is not an HD capable one.
Wallace Douglas: If you have picture, but no sound, you probably have the TV set to the wrong mode. You need to make sure it is set to PAL I, System I or UK, not B/G or any other option that might be available.
I'm assuming that the satellitereceiver is an official Skybox and not some other free-to-air receiver. If it isn't a Sky box, check that the receiver is also set to PAL I or UK. If it's a plug-in modulator, note that some sold by satcure.co.uk came pre-set for PAL B/G and need to be adjusted for PAL I.
TV transmissions have differed somewhat around the world, with the sound carriers at different locations relative to the video information, and sometimes different ways of encoding the sound.
can you help with connecting, toshiba plasma tv not hd, to humax digital recorder also panasonic dvd recorder i cannot record from the dvd recorder its very blurred, other than bbc 1 I have just got the latest aerial installed but i'm not sure of the connections.
Hi can you help me conect up my TV dystem i have a 46 in led hd samsung TV + samsung 5.1 blue ray cinema surround and a latest humax hard drive free view i am at present using 3 hand sets can you please help i want to use only 1 handset if poss
I have Sky+ (not multi-room). I have NO aerials in the house at all, and I want it to stay that way. I want to provide additional TV in the bedroom(s) and I am thinking of FreeSat. Is it posssible to connect a FreeSat box to my Sky Minidish to work alongside my Sky+ to provide existing Sky downstairs, and FreeSat upstairs.
Hello folks, need to pick your brains as having problems ?
Got BT Vision silver pack in october, just bought a samsung ue375220 smart tv very little idiot setup guide issued
I feel freeview and other isnt what I thought it would
Should only the hdmi cable be installed from bt vision box to tv or should I still leave the scart lead connected to the new tv too ?
the tv has a hd freeview box inside but it was saying on tv screen about something being too low for freeview ? I,ve checked my address and it says hd ready
Hi. I just replaced my dvd player (Tevion) with a JVC one as the former packed in. Since doing this I can't select sky channels from my sky remote and when I use my tv remote to select an aerialsignal (program 1) I get the AV1 channel. If I press program 1 again I get it. The only way I can get my sky remote to work is by disconnecting the dvd scart from the sky box. Can anyone shed some light on this? Many thanks.
Frank Mulveen: This suggests that either you are keeping the DVD player permanently switched on, which cant really be done with some players using a daisy chain link scart connection such as you have, or that the scart cable you are using is faulty.
An easy way to check which it is being to disconnect the DVD player from the mains connection, (NOT scart as well) if all works as normal by doing that then the DVD player will require to be used on another scart socket on the TV, or if none available on TV you will just have to keep it disconnected when not required, on the other hand if unplugging the DVD from the mains makes no difference, then try changing the scart cable used between the Skybox and the DVD player.
Frank Mulveen: Forgot to add, that if it is the DVD thats causing the problem, for a test you could maybe try daisy chaining the Skybox through the DVD rather than keeping it disconnected. (sockets permitting on the DVD)
I wonder if you can assist me, I have a Samsung DVD-VR320 connected to my Skybox and tv. I have tried retuning using the system setup, but still find I am unable to change programme channels on the DVD Video recorder, which prevents me from recording sky box progammes onto DVD or Video. Do I need to change scart plugs or retune, but if so how, when I cannot locate channels on the machine.
Thank you for your assistance.
Fmg: I cant quite understand how you have the devices connected, as if you want to record something from your Skybox it should be done via a scart lead between both devices, the Samsungs input set to "ext input" or "AV2" etc depending on what it might be called on that particular device.
The only channels that your DVD/VCR combo can tune are analogue ones, and so won't come into the equation as far as what you are trying to achieve is concerned, unless that is you have the Sky boxes RF output fed into the Samsungs aerial input socket.
Maybe you could clarify regarding the channels you cant locate.
now that Ihave a set top box I find that I cannot get AV3 channel in order to download images from my camcorder to the tv screen via the vcr. the link between vcr and tv seems to be ok because I can see the video no matter which channel is on the tv when I press play.How can I download from my camcorder?
s. wilkie: If the link between the VCR and the TV is OK then there is no reason that you cant see your camcorder, as all you do ON YOUR VCR is to select "ext input" or whatever AV number corresponds to the input sockets you are using on it to feed the camcorder into.
This being said assuming that you are using the camcorders A/V output socket with a lead that has either two, or three coloured phono (RCA) plugs on one end, these being used into the VCR, that is unless you are using one of the later types of VCR combo's that has a DVi input for camcorder purposes.
By the way yellow always being the video connection on any of these non-digital leads.
I need some help from someone who is familiar with OLD technology!
I have a Sky Digibox (we live in France) and the old Sky card, and used to be able to get the free to air stuff on Sky. Left this little lot with some tenants, who used their own Sky Box and left without reconnecting our one.
Now I try to do this cannot get it working. The digibox works, the local French TV shop checked it for me (they had to supply a power lead as the tenants made off with that as well...). They also supplied a Scart outputcable to connect to my old Sony Trinitron TV via 3 colour connectors, yellow, white and red. These go into my AV input bits on the TV.
I have bought a Samsung Seruies 5 T V but wish to use my old SKY Grundig Box with it - the new TV does not have a SCART connection plug on the back - I have received a Scart Connection Cable with the |TV but the other end of the lead is not and HDMI fitting type so will not fit in the side of the new TV - am I missing something simple that I can use to connect up?
Robin Soule: Terrible as it is to say when dealing with a high tech TV, but if your TV doesn't have a scart socket then the only way you can use your old Grundig Skybox with it is via the RF output facility on the Sky box, this being fed into your new TV's aerial socket, analogue being selected on the TV before scanning to pick up the Sky box.
The designers of these later models of Samsung TV's looking at scart connections as though they are something from the dark ages!
brian farren: It would be somewhat easier to give an exact answer to your question if you had mentioned the brand / model of Top Up TV box that you have.
Also, whether or not the TV being used has more than one scart socket?
Sid Barnett: As your TV has three scart sockets its best to use this method.
Connect the Sky boxes scart socket marked "TV" to the TV's Ext1 - then connect the Sky boxes other scart marked "VCR" to likewise on the DVD recorder - finally connect the scart socket marked "TV" on the DVD recorder to the TV's Ext2.
Operation - If you want to record from Sky select Ext2 on the TV, this switching it over to the Sony DVD recorder which is permanently on Sky channel "if" the DVD's input selector is set to "VCR", (or whatever its called on that set) you can then select whatever type of recording mode you wish to use for your recording.
Once you have set this up, or started recording as the case may be, you can switch the TV back to normal viewing channels again, likewise if you want to view what you have recorded later on just select Ext2 again.
There is a simpler "daisy chain" method that could have been used, but this is not always advisable as "some" DVD recorders lock the TV on their input socket when they are powered up, even in standby, so its best to keep DVD equipments on a separate input on the TV.
Regarding aerial connections, you haven't mentioned the model of Sony DVD recorder you are using, but its always best to use a separate aerial feed to it as the loop through "might" falter when the device is in standby, this resulting in the "normal" TV channels going down, so the addition of a simple powered two way splitter would suffice, one output for the TV and the other for the DVD recorder.
Sid Barnett: Meant also to add, that with everything set up this way the Skybox will (or should!) always over ride anything being viewed on the TV at the time "if" the Sky button on the remote is pressed, as a TV's Ext1 (or AV1) scart input socket is usually the only one capable of auto switching when the device connected into it is switched on.
If on an odd occasion it doesn't, flicking Sky into standby then back on again usually resolves the issue.
Hi. My mother-in-law has a new HD ready TV which is connected to both a DVD player and a VCR. The picturequality from her DTV is poor, and I'm wondering if its because the ariel signal is weak? The TV receives the DTV channels via the ariel which comes from the wall via the VCR.
Another problems is that her VCR (which is ancient...) cannot record from her TV. Is this because it is connected with only one scart lead? She can only record on her VCR the terrestrial channels received by the video player itself. She can only watch videos and record these 5 channels.
Is there a way of connecting her ancient VCR so that it records DTV? I looked at the AV connections and it doesn't seem to recognise the DTV input. Is this because it's only got one scart connection connected to the TV? I'm baffled because I would have thought it would pick up the AV signal from the DTV? Do I need to manually search for this incoming channel???
Is there a way of making the DTV picture clearer or is it because her flat has a rubbish ariel position / connection??
And is there a way of connecting her TV to the dark-ages VCR so that it records from her DTV?
I'm encouraging her to buy a recordable DVD and possibly new VCR.....
Alice: suggest buying a PVR with a hard drive built in so much easier than trying to tackle an old vcr but if you really want to go down that route you should be able to connect the tv to the vcr and select the av input but the problem there is you can only record whats on the tv its not a good way of doing it
as for aerial reception we really need to know where you are - i know sheffield and the surrounding area its very difficult to answer reception problems without a knowledge of the locality
KB Aerials Sheffield : Thank you Keith. When I select the AV input, it says "no signal". Does this mean I have to tune it in to the DTV signal? On the TV itself, it seems to display the VCR films she plays on it. But the problem is the other way round - how can she see what's playing on the DTV in order to then record it?
Re the aerial reception - my m-in-l is based in Chigwell, Essex. (No Essex jokes please...!)
I have a Samsung LCD TV - is a freeview TV as advertised.
How am I able to connect to freeview channels -? will I be able to get all channels available in UK freeview list?
I will have disconnected broadband line (cable) - can I connect using this cable ?
please advise what will I need.