beautypg.com

Connections & setup, Chapter 1 23 – RCA HDLP50 User Manual

Page 25

background image

Connections & Setup

Chapter 1

23

INPUT 2

COMPOSITE

VIDEO

L

R

S-VIDEO

HDMI 1 INPUT

HDMI 2 INPUT

INPUT 2 and 4 COMPOSITE INPUT S

Connect an NTSC (analog) device. These

jacks are used for most audio/video connections between devices. The audio/video jacks
are often color coded (yellow for video, red for right audio, and white for left audio).

R Audio

provides right audio connection and connector is usually red.

L Audio

provides left audio connection and connector is usually white.

V (Video) provides composite video connection and connector is usually yellow.

S-VIDEO

Lets you connect an S-Video cable for better picture quality to a device

with S-Video capability, such as a VCR or DVD player. When using S-Video, make
sure to connect the two audio cables as well as the
S-Video connector.

The S-Video jack provides better picture quality than the composite video jacks
because the color (chrominance, also called chroma) part of the signal is separated
from the black and white (luminance) part of the picture.

INPUT 4 COMPOSITE INPUT

Provides connection to an additional optional video

device, such as a DVD player or satellite receiver. The jacks are the same as described
above for INPUT 2.

FIXED/VARIABLE AUDIO OUTPUTS

L and R

Provides right front and right rear mixed sound to the right input, and left

front and left rear mixed sound to the left input.

SVGA INPUT (might not be available on your TV)

VGA/SVGA/XGA

Connect your device with a VGA, SVGA, or XGA output, to

this jack using a 15 pin D-sub cable.

AUDIO (Stereo mini jack)

Use to obtain sound when a device is connected to

the SVGA jack. Use a 3.5 mm stereo mini pin cable (sometimes referred to as 1/8”
stereo mini pin) to connect a device to your TV.

HDMI 1 and 2 INPUTS

(some TV models only have one HDMI Input) High-

Defi nition Multimedia Interface/Digital Visual Interface Provides an uncompressed
digital interface that carries both video and audio data by way of an integrated mini-plug
cable. Since HDMI is based on Digital Visual Interface (DVI), the jack on the back of
your TV is also compatible with DVI devices.

Note: If you connect a device with a DVI jack to one of the HDMI inputs, you’ll
need an HDMI to DVI adapter. Also, connect audio cables to an input that is not
in use. An example is shown on page 16. Then go to the
Advanced Audio menu and
select
DVI Audio Input to choose the input you’re using to receive audio.

SVGA INPUT

AUDIO

VGA/SVGA/XGA

L

R

FIXED/VARIABLE

AUDIO OUTPUT

VIDEO

L

R

S-VIDEO

INPUT 4

COMPOSITE

VIDEO

L

R

S-VIDEO

Continues on next page...