Intr
oduction
Connecting
y
our T
V
Using the
Remote Contr
ol
Setting up
y
our T
V
Using the T
V
’s
F
eatur
es
Appendix
Index
7
Connecting a DVD player or satellite receiver
and a VCR
This connection allows you to watch DVD/satellite, VCR, and TV
programs. You can record one TV channel while watching another
channel.
You will need:
• one coaxial cable
• two pairs of audio cables (one single and one pair of audio cables
for a mono VCR)
• one video cable
• one S-video cable
ANT( 75 )
ANT-1
CHANNEL IN
ON
OFF
OUT
R
L
OUT
VIDEO
VAR
AUDIO
L/
MONO
IN
DVD IN
L
R
C
R
C
B
Y
L/ MONO
AUDIO
R
S-VIDEO
VIDEO
OUT
ANT-2
AUDIO CENTER
VIDEO 1 VIDEO 2
COLOR
STREAM
INPUT
AUDIO
R
AUDIO
IN from ANT
VIDEO AUDIO
OUT to TV
CH 3
L
R
CH 4
IN
OUT
IN from ANT
VIDEO
OUT
OUT
S-VIDEO
AUDIO
OUT
L
R
Connecting a DVD player with ColorStream
®
and a VCR
This connection allows you to watch DVD, VCR, and TV programs,
and record TV and some DVD programs. You can record from one
source while watching a program from another source. Your TV is
capable of using ColorStream (component video). Connecting your
TV to a ColorStream-compatible DVD player (such as a Toshiba
DVD player with ColorStream), can greatly enhance picture quality
and performance.
You will need:
• one coaxial cable
• three pairs of audio cables (two single and one pair of audio
cables for a mono VCR)
• two video cables
• one set of ColorStream video cables
Note:
For better picture quality, use an S-video
cable instead of a regular video cable
between the TV and DVD player/satellite
receiver.
Do not connect a regular video cable and an
S-video cable to Video-1 at the same time.
Caution:
The unauthorized recording of materials such
as TV programs, videotapes, and DVDs may
infringe upon the provisions of copyright laws.
Some program sources, especially DVD, are
encoded so they cannot be copied.
TV
From Cable
Stereo VCR
From Satellite dish
(for satellite
receiver only)
DVD Player/Satellite Receiver
Caution:
The unauthorized recording of materials such
as TV programs, videotapes, and DVDs may
infringe upon the provisions of copyright laws.
Some program sources, especially DVD, are
encoded so they cannot be copied.