Setup and Connections
5
Protect Your Components from Overheating
•
Do not block ventilation holes in any of the components. Arrange
the components so that air can circulate freely.
•
Do not stack components.
•
Allow adequate ventilation when placing your components in a
stand.
•
Place an amplifier or digital receiver on the top shelf of the stand so
heated air rising from it will not flow around other components.
Jacks and Cables
RF Jacks and Coaxial Cables (F-type)
The RF jacks provide good picture and mono sound quality, and are to
be used if audio/video connections are not available for your TV.
Audio/Video Jacks and Cables (RCA-type)
The audio/video jacks provide very good picture and stereo sound
quality, and should be used if your TV has no S-Video jack.
Theses jacks are used for most audio/video connections between
components. The digital receiver audio/video jacks are color coded
(yellow for video, red for right audio, and white for left audio). If your
TV has only one input for audio (mono), connect it to the left (white)
audio jack on the digital receiver.
S-Video Jack and Cable
The S-Video jack provides the best picture quality for your digital
receiver system.
This jack is available on many TVs and is used in conjunction with audio
cables to connect the digital receiver to your TV. Remember also to
connect the left and right audio cables because the S-Video jack carries
only the picture signal, not the sound.
VCR Controller Jack and Cable
The VCR controller cable plugs into a jack on the digital receiver’s back
panel. The other end of the cable affixes to your VCR’s remote sensor.
S-Video Jack
RF Jack
Audio/Video Jacks
VCR Controller Jack