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Philips 36RF82S User Manual

Page 6

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6

T

he television is equipped with external
input and output jacks for use with optional

accessory devices such as VCRs, DVD Player,
Gaming Units, Video Cameras, etc. The follow-
ing gives a brief explanation of the different
types of jacks available and the type of cables
needed to make connections.

1

75

RF - Cable/Antenna Inputs

(Antenna A and Antenna B) connection
jacks. Located on the back of the televi-
sion.

2

AV 1 in - Audio/Video connection jacks.
Located on the back of the television.
Along with Component Video Inputs.

3

AV 2 in - Audio/Video Input connection
jacks. Located on the back of the televi-
sion.

4

S-Video Input jack - Used with the AV
2 in Audio Left and Right Input jacks.
Located on the back of the television.

5

Monitor Out - Audio/Video Output
connection jacks. Located on the back of
the television.

6

AV 3 (SIDE) - Audio/Video Input jacks,
plus a Headphone jack located on the
side of the cabinet.

7

8

External Speaker - Speaker wire

inputs for right and left channel external
speakers.

J

ACK

P

ANEL

D

ESCRIPTIONS AND

R

EQUIRED

C

ABLES

1

2

6

3

4

7

5

Located on the back of the TV

Located on the

side of the TV

A 75-ohm coaxial cable connects signals
from an antenna or a cable TV company
to the antenna jack on the back of the TV.
Coaxial cables use “F” connectors.

A 300- to 75-ohm twin-lead adapter
accepts the antenna cables (called twin-
lead wires) from an antenna, allowing
you to connect the antenna signal to the
TV.

An S-Video cable provides better picture
performance than regular (composite)
video connections.
S-Video cables can be used only with S-
Video-compatible accessory devices. You
must also connect the left and right audio
cables to the AV 2 Audio in jacks because
the S-Video jack carries only the picture
signal, not the sound.

Video and audio cables with standard
RCA (phono) connectors connect the
video and audio jacks of accessory
devices such as VCRs and DVD players
to the jacks on the TV.

These connectors are usually color coded.
The jacks on your TV are also color
coded to match the colors of the connec-
tors. Yellow for video (composite) and
Red and White for the right and left audio
channels. The video cables used to con-
nect component video or RGB (high-reso-
lution) jacks are color coded red, green,
and blue.

A two-way signal splitter enables you to
take a single antenna or cable TV signal
and supply it to two different inputs.

Cable Descriptions:

Yellow - Video

White - Audio Left

Red - Audio Right

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