Actually, Daedilus may be more on top of this than he realizes.
It sounds like the cable box passes, through the HDMI cable, normal analog audio to the TV just fine but, when passing a Dolby Digital digital signal, strange things occur.
Actually, I'm not too sure the TV itself is capable of decoding a 5.1 Dolby Digital signal. To decode this requires a Dolby Digital decoder and I don't think, but I could be wrong, TV's incorporate these, at least yet.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Daedilus
the sizzling is the sound of all the dollars you are burning sending a 5.1 signal to a device with 2 onboard speakers...
It's possible that when the TV's analog audio input gets a digital signal, it simply tries to reproduce what it "hears" and a digital stream does sound a lot like static. Ever hear a modem connecting? ...kinda sounds like eggs frying.
The simplest solution I can come up with is to simply send a red/white analog feed from the cable box to the TV, so everything will come out of the TV when you want, and send the DD signal directly to your receiver. I'm sure the cable box offers a means to do this, either via toslink or digital coax.
If push comes to shove, you can always turn the audio on the TV all the way down when using the receiver. (This is how mine is set up)
And yes, HDMI is far from bug free at this time, particularly where cable and satellite boxes are concerned. Unless there's some reason that you absotivley, posilutely need HDMI, component will generally do just about anything HDMI can do. But, some hardware will do some things thrrough HDMI and not component and vice versa. My Tosh upscaling DVD will send 720 and 1080 through HDMI but not component. My buddies LG, OTOH, sends 720 and 180 via component, but not HDMI. Go figga. You need to know your hardware.
...good luck