Well...I finally did it.


Prof K

Active Member
I bought at Hi Def tv this weekend and set it up (I think I'm having buyers remorse). Anyway, I just got off the phone with Cox and I'm going to get the box today so my picture will be clearer, right?

I tried to hook up my DVD player to my tv and it SUcks. Its giving some strange feed back through the speakers and the picture is HORRIBLE!!! What do I do???
 
I bought at Hi Def tv this weekend and set it up (I think I'm having buyers remorse). Anyway, I just got off the phone with Cox and I'm going to get the box today so my picture will be clearer, right?

I tried to hook up my DVD player to my tv and it SUcks. Its giving some strange feed back through the speakers and the picture is HORRIBLE!!! What do I do???


Can you take a picture of the connection?
 

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No. I can tell you that I have the Red White and Yellow wires going from the DVD to the Hi Def and thats it. Do you think I need an S video?
 
No. I can tell you that I have the Red White and Yellow wires going from the DVD to the Hi Def and thats it. Do you think I need an S video?

You want to use component video (red/yellow/blue, I think) for your video and standard RCA (red/white) or optical for your audio. If you don't have component video on your DVD, use S-Video. That should fix your sync issues.

My TV should be in this weekend. The other thing that I am adding is an upconverting DVD player which comes with an HDMI connection and takes my collection of DVD's to near-HD resolution. You might want to consider making that move also.
 
Welcome to the "Club". First, wait till Cox or whoever bring you your "Hi-Def" box with HDMI outlets. Make sure you specify that you want HDMI outlets. Then, go to walmart or bestbuy and buy a HDMI cable. It runs anywhere from $40-$100 dollars. Or you can buy it for $5 off e-bay, but you'll want to have it when the box comes. Third, throw away your DVD player and go and buy a "HI-Def" DVD player and tell the Cox or whoever guy to hook that up also. Fourth, go out and buy some surround sound to go with your "HI-Def" tv and get the Cox or whoever guy to hook that up also. And last, but not least, sit back and enjoy your newly entertainment. :)

Hope I was some help.

P.S. If any other problems occur, pleas feel free to contact your Cox or whoever guy for further instructions.

Thank you.

Black Bengal
I.T. Specialist
 
When Cox comes out to setup your HD TV - Dont show them your HDMI cables - they might have some they will give you for free. If they dont have them - give them yours - if they have them you can return your HDMI cable to the store.
 
Yea, I got Comcast for 2 pair of those cables.

When Cox comes out to setup your HD TV - Dont show them your HDMI cables - they might have some they will give you for free. If they dont have them - give them yours - if they have them you can return your HDMI cable to the store.
 
First of all, thanks for the advice!!!

Second, now that I have the HD box, I have faint green lines going up my screen on the HD channels and the picture is worse on my regular channels!! What now? :(
 
When Cox comes out to setup your HD TV - Dont show them your HDMI cables - they might have some they will give you for free. If they dont have them - give them yours - if they have them you can return your HDMI cable to the store.

Cox will not supply the HDMI Cables.

First of all, thanks for the advice!!!

Second, now that I have the HD box, I have faint green lines going up my screen on the HD channels and the picture is worse on my regular channels!! What now? :(

It sounds like you may not have all of the RCA Cables connected properly. Make sure they are all in tight. The HDMI port on the back on the Cox DVR Box works and your TV should also have an HDMI Port on the back of it so you may want to try that set up.

What HDTV Brand did you get?
 
What brand TV did you get? Hopefully you didnt get that Quzert brand TV.

First tell us exactly what you have. TV Make and Model and the size. Then tell us about you box and connections you need to be specific for us to help you. Also what is the lighting source in the room and how far away are you from the TV.
 
Hey I just got mine saturday and the picture was better with the regular box than the HD box I picked up at comcast today. I purchased the 50' Hitachi LCD projection. Comcast gave me all the RCA cables and I set the HD as the instructions stated. Will the HDMI show a better picture?
 
Hey I just got mine saturday and the picture was better with the regular box than the HD box I picked up at comcast today. I purchased the 50' Hitachi LCD projection. Comcast gave me all the RCA cables and I set the HD as the instructions stated. Will the HDMI show a better picture?

DVI vs. HDMI vs. Component Video -- Which is Better?

Posted by Admin on Monday, February 14, 2005 - 03:15 am:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As DVI and HDMI connections become more and more widely used, we are often asked: which is better, DVI (or HDMI) or component video? The answer, as it happens, is not cut-and-dried.

First, to clear away one element that can be confusing: DVI and HDMI are exactly the same as one another, image-quality-wise. The principal differences are that HDMI carries audio as well as video, and uses a different type of connector, but both use the same encoding scheme, and that's why a DVI source can be connected to an HDMI monitor, or vice versa, with a DVI/HDMI cable, with no intervening converter box.

The upshot of this article--in case you're not inclined to read all the details--is that it's very hard to predict whether a digital DVI or HDMI connection will produce a better or worse image than an analog component video connection. There will often be significant differences between the digital and the analog signals, but those differences are not inherent in the connection type and instead depend upon the characteristics of the source device (e.g., your DVD player) and the display device (e.g., your TV set). Why that is, however, requires a bit more discussion.

What are DVI, HDMI and Component Video?

DVI/HDMI and Component Video are all video standards which support a variety of resolutions, but which deliver the signal from the source to the display in very different ways. The principal important difference is that DVI/HDMI deliver the signal in a digital format, much the same way that a file is delivered from one computer to another along a network, while Component Video is an analog format, delivering the signal not as a bitstream, but as a set of continuously varying voltages representing (albeit indirectly, as we'll get to in a moment) the red, green and blue components of the signal.

Both DVI/HDMI and Component Video deliver signals as discrete red, green, and blue color components, together with sync information which allows the display to determine when a new line, or a new frame, begins. The DVI/HDMI standard delivers these along three data channels in a format called T.M.D.S., which stands for "Transmission Minimized Differential Signaling." Big words aside, the T.M.D.S. format basically involves a blue channel to which horizontal and vertical sync are added, and separate green and red channels.

Component Video is delivered, similarly, with the color information split up three ways. However, component video uses a "color-difference" type signal, which consists of Luminance (the "Y", or "green," channel, representing the total brightness of the image), Red Minus Luminance (the "Pr," or "Red," channel), and Blue Minus Luminance (the "Pb," or "Blue," channel). The sync pulses for both horizontal and vertical are delivered on the Y channel. The display calculates the values of red, green and blue from the Y, Pb, and Pr signals.

Both signal types, then, are fundamentally quite similar; they break up the image in similar ways, and deliver the same type of information to the display, albeit in different forms. How they differ, as we'll see, will depend to a great extent upon the particular characteristics of the source and display devices, and can depend upon cabling as well.

Isn't Digital Just Better?

It is often supposed by writers on this subject that "digital is better." Digital signal transfer, it is assumed, is error-free, while analog signals are always subject to some amount of degradation and information loss. There is an element of truth to this argument, but it tends to fly in the face of real-world considerations. First, there is no reason why any perceptible degradation of an analog component video signal should occur even over rather substantial distances; the maximum runs in home theater installations do not present a challenge for analog cabling built to professional standards. Second, it is a flawed assumption to suppose that digital signal handling is always error-free. DVI and HDMI signals aren't subject to error correction; once information is lost, it's lost for good. That is not a consideration with well-made cable over short distances, but can easily become a factor at distance.

Full Story
 
DVI vs. HDMI vs. Component Video -- Which is Better?

Posted by Admin on Monday, February 14, 2005 - 03:15 am:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As DVI and HDMI connections become more and more widely used, we are often asked: which is better, DVI (or HDMI) or component video? The answer, as it happens, is not cut-and-dried.

First, to clear away one element that can be confusing: DVI and HDMI are exactly the same as one another, image-quality-wise. The principal differences are that HDMI carries audio as well as video, and uses a different type of connector, but both use the same encoding scheme, and that's why a DVI source can be connected to an HDMI monitor, or vice versa, with a DVI/HDMI cable, with no intervening converter box.

The upshot of this article--in case you're not inclined to read all the details--is that it's very hard to predict whether a digital DVI or HDMI connection will produce a better or worse image than an analog component video connection. There will often be significant differences between the digital and the analog signals, but those differences are not inherent in the connection type and instead depend upon the characteristics of the source device (e.g., your DVD player) and the display device (e.g., your TV set). Why that is, however, requires a bit more discussion.

What are DVI, HDMI and Component Video?

DVI/HDMI and Component Video are all video standards which support a variety of resolutions, but which deliver the signal from the source to the display in very different ways. The principal important difference is that DVI/HDMI deliver the signal in a digital format, much the same way that a file is delivered from one computer to another along a network, while Component Video is an analog format, delivering the signal not as a bitstream, but as a set of continuously varying voltages representing (albeit indirectly, as we'll get to in a moment) the red, green and blue components of the signal.

Both DVI/HDMI and Component Video deliver signals as discrete red, green, and blue color components, together with sync information which allows the display to determine when a new line, or a new frame, begins. The DVI/HDMI standard delivers these along three data channels in a format called T.M.D.S., which stands for "Transmission Minimized Differential Signaling." Big words aside, the T.M.D.S. format basically involves a blue channel to which horizontal and vertical sync are added, and separate green and red channels.

Component Video is delivered, similarly, with the color information split up three ways. However, component video uses a "color-difference" type signal, which consists of Luminance (the "Y", or "green," channel, representing the total brightness of the image), Red Minus Luminance (the "Pr," or "Red," channel), and Blue Minus Luminance (the "Pb," or "Blue," channel). The sync pulses for both horizontal and vertical are delivered on the Y channel. The display calculates the values of red, green and blue from the Y, Pb, and Pr signals.

Both signal types, then, are fundamentally quite similar; they break up the image in similar ways, and deliver the same type of information to the display, albeit in different forms. How they differ, as we'll see, will depend to a great extent upon the particular characteristics of the source and display devices, and can depend upon cabling as well.

Isn't Digital Just Better?

It is often supposed by writers on this subject that "digital is better." Digital signal transfer, it is assumed, is error-free, while analog signals are always subject to some amount of degradation and information loss. There is an element of truth to this argument, but it tends to fly in the face of real-world considerations. First, there is no reason why any perceptible degradation of an analog component video signal should occur even over rather substantial distances; the maximum runs in home theater installations do not present a challenge for analog cabling built to professional standards. Second, it is a flawed assumption to suppose that digital signal handling is always error-free. DVI and HDMI signals aren't subject to error correction; once information is lost, it's lost for good. That is not a consideration with well-made cable over short distances, but can easily become a factor at distance.

Full Story

Thanks CD. I will ride with my connection for now. It has improved and cirtain channels look great. I may try the cable later.
 
Cox will not supply the HDMI Cables.



It sounds like you may not have all of the RCA Cables connected properly. Make sure they are all in tight. The HDMI port on the back on the Cox DVR Box works and your TV should also have an HDMI Port on the back of it so you may want to try that set up.

What HDTV Brand did you get?
I have a Hitachi, Aspect. Its a 50 by 39 inch plasma tv. I have Cox HD box with DVR. The wires leading from the box is white with 5 different colored port enteries (male parts like RCA cables). The first is white with a red band, the second is green, third is blue the, forth is I think yellow and the last is black with a red band around it. I put the wires in the box matched by color but on the tv itself, the colors dont match just like that. I dont know if the tv is compatable with the chord its self.

I tried to use the regular RCA cables with the tv. I got sound with some feed back, but no picture. The COX man is coming Thursday but I have a STRONG suspision that the problem is the TV ports. When the men from Conn's came to hook it up, they had difficulty using the RCA ports when they tried to use them with the regular cable box. They said when I go Hi Def then it would straighten the picture out.

The tv is about 10-12, if not more, good feet from my couch. But the distance from my screen should not make the green and purple lines go up my screen and my tv look worse with the HD box.

When I get home I can tell you more info about the setup.
 

Click here to visit HBCUSportsShop
Ok

You are using componets for video and the other two are for audio


Dish them and get you a Monster HDMI cable

send_binary.asp
 
Look at you cables carefully. Your audio cables will be red and white (they may be label) and your video connections will be blue, green, and orange, it's easy to get the red and orange mixed up.
 
Look at you cables carefully. Your audio cables will be red and white (they may be label) and your video connections will be blue, green, and orange, it's easy to get the red and orange mixed up.

Bluedog is correct. Once the Component RCA Cables are connected correctly, it will be a beautiful thing. You will watch plenty of DiscoveryHD. Channel 746.
 
You ninjas that are saying you dont see any difference between the HD feed and the Regular feed are doing something wrong...
 
Ninjas I hooked the thing up correctly. My propblem was that I was not watching the HD channels. That ish is clear and tight.:love: :love: it's the regular channels that still look iffy but they too look bether than the old box. I'm happy now that I gone up to the 800 channels which are the HD channels for comcast.:nod: :nod:
 
Your regular channels should not be looking funny either. You also may want to check to see if you have your resolution settings on auto and double check the security of your connection.

Sometimes the cables that cox/comcast gives you aren't secure enough and you have to exchange them.
 
Alright.

Cox came over yesterday and I SET UP EVERYTHING CORRECTLY :what: !!! The green and purple lines are still going up my screen though. He did sharpen up my picture though, Im not sure what he did.
I went back to Conn's and told the mgr that I dont even want the TV any more since its giving such a sh!ty picture. He gave me a number to call so I can get it fixed or get my money back.
 
Alright.

Cox came over yesterday and I SET UP EVERYTHING CORRECTLY :what: !!! The green and purple lines are still going up my screen though. He did sharpen up my picture though, Im not sure what he did.
I went back to Conn's and told the mgr that I dont even want the TV any more since its giving such a sh!ty picture. He gave me a number to call so I can get it fixed or get my money back.

:tup: Get your money back and get one of these.

B000F4CTUK.01._AA280_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg




Panasonic TH-50PX60U 50" Plasma HDTV

Built-In HDTV Tuner: Add HD-capable antenna to receive over-the-air high-definition broadcasts, where available. Optional set-top box required for high-definition cable or satellite programming.

HDMI inputs provide an uncompressed all-digital audio/video link for the highest-quality connection and supports copy-protected HD broadcast content

1366 x 768 pixel resolution, major DTV signals DTV signals including 1080i, 720p and 480p
More Options


Product Features


16:9 aspect ratio delivers a cinema-style entertainment experience; 4:3, full, zoom, just, H-fill aspect ratio modes


Digital Cinema Reality for precise reproduction of cinematic pictures

3,072 shades of gradation minimizes the false contouring artifact so colors appear smooth and natural; displays 29 billion equivalent colors

High contrast ratio of 10,000:1 for an arresting viewing experience

3D Y/C digital comb filter delivers state-of-the-art detail and color enhancement

Other image enhancement technologies include motion pattern noise reduction, video noise reduction and sub pixel control

20W full-range speaker system with virtual surround sound for stunning audio

Ultraslim (3-7/10" deep) design is ideal for wall mounting with optional wall bracket (not included)

Progressive scanning maximizes the picture quality of progressive-scan DVD players, set-top boxes and digital video recorders

Inputs: 2 HDMI, 1 analog audio, 3 composite video (1 front, 2 rear), 3 S-video (1 front, 2 rear), 5 audio (1 front, 4 rear) and 2 component video

Outputs: 1 composite video, 1 audio and 1 digital audio

V-Chip parental controls keep children from being exposed to undesirable material

Trilingual (English, French, Spanish) on-screen menus

Other convenient functions include a built-in closed caption decoder, off-timers, video input label and video picture


Product Details


Warranty Terms - Parts 1 year limited; 2 years limited: glass panel

Warranty Terms - Labor 1 year limited

Product Height 34-7/10" with stand (32-1/5" without)

Product Width 47-3/5"

Product Weight 94.8 lbs. with stand (89.3 lbs. without)

Product Depth 14-3/5" with stand (3-7/10" without)

TV Type Plasma flat panel

Screen Size 50"

Display Type Flat-panel plasma

Built-In_DVR No

Digital Cable Ready No

Digital Capabilities HD built-in

Maximum Resolution 1366 x 768

Vertical Scanning Lines (Native Mode) 768

Contrast Ratio 10,000:1

Comb Filter 3D Y/C digital

Media Card Slot No

USB Slot No

Digital Convergence No

Picture-In-Picture No

HDMI Inputs 2

DVI Inputs No

S-Video Inputs 3

Component Video Inputs 2

Composite Inputs 3

RGB Inputs No

PC Inputs No

Front A/V Inputs No

Headphone Jacks No

Audio Outputs 1

Speakers 2

Simulated Surround Yes

Language Options English, French, Spanish

V-Chip Yes

Sleep/Alarm Timer Yes

Or you can get the Panasonic TH-50PX600U 50" Plasma HDTV with Picture in Picture and a Media Card Slot.


Trust me, you'll thank me later. I'm really enjoying mines.
 
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