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November 10th, 2005, 09:46 PM
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OT: Home Theater for dummies
Long story short, my old receiver wasn't working right and I got a new one I am a little confused on the best way to set it up. I used to be very much into A/V and knowledgeable about such things until about 10 years ago when some of the new technology and terminology started to overcome me. I still wouldn't rate myself as a total dummy, but in the last several years, I haven't kept up with reading all the latest stuff like I used to. I can get everything to work (being an engineer and all) but I am pretty sure I don't have things hooked up the best way (after all, I am not an electrical engineer). I'd rather not go into all the gory details here since I have lots of specific questions regarding both video and audio setups also for my specific equipment.
I don't have state of the art equipment basically because my family room is not built for home theater so I'd lose the high-end effects anyway due to ambient noise, light and speaker configuration. I just want to configure my system for the optimum set-up and I have too many questions to be sure if it is. I also think I may have some components that can't use the newer features on my new receiver and I really don't want to upgrade any other components just now.
The question is: Is there a good on-line, or not, A/V reference for dummies? I can easily find out definitions of terms and such, and what connector to poke into what hole on each component to make it work. But what I am looking for is a discussion on the various ways that things work together, which is better, and why.
Thanks.
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November 10th, 2005, 11:03 PM
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Major
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Re: OT: Home Theater for dummies
This is CNet: CNet Digital Home Guide
Tom's Hardware (Den Guru)
DenGuru
Maybe those will help a little.
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November 11th, 2005, 12:35 AM
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Re: OT: Home Theater for dummies
Thanks. Those seem a little too basic for me, though. I used to read Crutchfield all the time to stay current. Their website is very good for buying, comparing and learning about A/V:
http://www.crutchfieldadvisor.com/
I was sorta looking for similar websites.
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November 11th, 2005, 04:30 PM
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Re: OT: Home Theater for dummies
Anyone have experience with component video vs. S-video? I currently am using S-video and now have the ability to upgrade, but from what I have been reading, many people can't see any difference in video quality. Is it worth it?
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November 11th, 2005, 04:42 PM
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Re: OT: Home Theater for dummies
I used component once back in highschool. It was for a video graphics unit. The monitors were not in the best condition and so it is kind of hard to judge from that, but I don't think you will get alot of difference from a CRT television. If you have a LCD or plasma TV you might get a more noticeable difference, but I don't have experience with those. Keep in mind though that my experience is from the same time period as yours 
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November 11th, 2005, 07:20 PM
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Re: OT: Home Theater for dummies
Slick,
Tough question to answer not knowing what equipment specs you have, including display type. In general Component Video is much better than S-Video and will become especially noticeable with progressive scan DVDs on any display, and even more so with an HD display. Always use Component or better (DVI or HDMI) with an HD display and always use Component with digital satellite. If you primarily watch cable (digital or analog) on a standard NTSC TV you may not see any benefit from Component over S, it will depend some on your eyes.
Hope this helps.
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