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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by Smokey
    Red, white, and yellow is usually called composite A/V connection. Yellow is for composite video and red and white are for left and right audio channels. Composite video refer to when all elements of video signal are carried in only one wire. Another example of composite video is signal carried on coax cable from cable company.

    Component video connection refer to THREE cable video connection (green, blue, and red) between TV and video source (which IsmaVA mentioned as being the best connection). HD satellite receiver will have component connection, but non HD satellite receivers will not. Try s-video connection. I think you will notice a difference.
    I will look through the satellite receiver's manual again. It talks about connecting components using component connectors so it must be an HD capable receiver. Are component connectors the same as composit as far them having RCA jacks on each end or is there a difference between the component and composit wires themselves? In other words, can I make a component connection using the composit connectors?

  2. #2
    My custom user title This Guy's Avatar
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    yes. You could use a set of A/V composite cables as component, it's what I'm doing cause it was cheaper then buying "component cables."

  3. #3
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    I've always wondered if there was a difference (internally) between composite video cables and component video cables.

  4. #4
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    I thought I was on to something but......

    I started reading the satellite receiver manual again and I went back to the part where it talks about component connections. There's a little chart on the page that shows which connections are best, i.e., component, then S-video, then composit, then coax. I didn't notice before the little astrik next to the component connection which designates that is only available on a certain model receiver. Low and behold it isn't available on mine. What I though was a component connection was actually only a composit connection. I should've notice the connector colors were red, white, and yellow instead of red, blue, and green. With this realization, I connected the S-video cable expecting an improvement in picture quality. My guess is the difference between any of these different types of connections is very minute because I really can't see much of a difference, if any at all, at least not with a TV broadcast anyway. As a matter of fact, I also just found out my DVD player doesn't have component connections. Why would anyone make a DVD player without component connections? I will connect it using an S-Video connector as well. I'll see if I see any difference here as well.

  5. #5
    Suspended Smokey's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ace H
    I've always wondered if there was a difference (internally) between composite video cables and component video cables.
    Not if they are quality made. Just make sure it have a 75 ohm rating, and have good shielding

    Grampi, if you have s-video capability, then by all mean use it. Although you might not notice any thing visually, but it is a better connection (than composite)

  6. #6
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    Composite (yellow connector) as well as the component video cable are a 75 ohm coax-type cable where the red and white cables are for audio. So the cables are not the same. You have to have component hi-scan video cables for both progressive scan and HD video reproduction.

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