Connecting your tv, Connecting a vcr – Toshiba 34HDX82 User Manual

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Intr

oduction

Connecting

y

our T

V

Using the

Remote Contr

ol

Setting up

y

our T

V

Using the T

V’s

F

eatur

es

Appendix

Index

ANT-1

OUT

ANT-2

ANT(75 )

S-VIDEO

VIDEO

L/
MONO

AUDIO

R

VIDEO-2

VIDEO-1

Y

P

B

P

R

L

Y

P

B

P

R

AUDIO

COLOR
STREAM
HD - 2

COLOR
STREAM
HD - 1

R

L

AUDIO

R

OUT

AUDIO

CENTER

CHANNEL IN

L/
MONO

AUDIO

ON

OFF

VIDEO

VAR
AUDIO

L

R

R

I N

I N

L

R

DVI / HDCP

IN

IN from ANT

VIDEO AUDIO

OUT to TV

CH 3

L

R

CH 4

IN

OUT

Note:
If you have a mono VCR, connect L/Mono to
VCR Audio OUT using only one audio cable.

If you have an S-VHS VCR, use an S-video
cable instead of a standard video cable.

Do not connect a standard video cable and
an S-video cable to Video-1 (or Video-2) at
the same time, or the picture performance
will be unacceptable.

From cable box or antenna

Stereo VCR

TV

Connecting your 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.

Connecting a VCR

This connection allows you to watch local channels and video
programs, record on the VCR while watching TV, and record one
channel while watching another channel.
You will need:

• two coaxial cables
• one set of standard A/V cables

Coaxial (antenna) cable

Standard stereo A/V cables
(typically color-coded yellow for video,
red and white for audio)

S-video cable

Component video cables
(typically color-coded red, green, blue)

DVI-D digital single-link cable

Note: Cables are not provided with your TV.

Coaxial cable is the cable that comes in from your antenna, cable TV service, or cable
converter box. Coaxial cable uses “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.
DVI-D digital single-link cable is for use with video equipment that has a DVI-D digital
single-link connector (see page 13).

NOTE REGARDING PICTURE QUALITY

When connecting video equipment to your Toshiba TV:

For GOOD picture quality: Use a standard yellow stereo A/V 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 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 ”DVI/HDCP IN” for full system connection).

CAUTION: Do not plug in any power cords
until you have finished connecting all equipment.

34HDX82(E)07-14

8/20/02, 3:56 PM

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