DaviDaVinci
Golden Member
- Dec 28, 2000
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Originally posted by: faZZter
"I never pay retail."
Cool, tell me where you buy gas at ok? I wanna save too...!![]()
Originally posted by: amnesiac
First, IMO it's a waste of money buying component cables for anything less than a 32" TV.
Second, I really hope you either a) got the cables for free or b) got them for a ridiculous discount.
If you paid full retail for those monster cables I'm going to gather a crowd so we can all point and laugh at you for being such a buffoon and a consumer whore.
Hey everyone, let's point and laugh at the consumer whore!! Bwahahahahahahah!!!!
Err, which coaxial cable are you talking about?Originally posted by: brigden
I think I may have isolated the issue. It isn't the DVD player, as first suspected, but after farting about with the surge protector, wall outlet, and coaxial cable it seems that the coaxial cable is to blame. With the cable unconnected the flickering disappears, but once it is reconnected the flickering reappears.
OK, so it's the cable, but why does the component video not like the coaxial cable?
I know the cable signal is weak as it is split with a crummy RCA 4-way splitter and the legnth of the cable is quite long; fifty feet, I believe. So, would a better quality coaxial cable make a difference?
Originally posted by: Howard
Err, which coaxial cable are you talking about?Originally posted by: brigden
I think I may have isolated the issue. It isn't the DVD player, as first suspected, but after farting about with the surge protector, wall outlet, and coaxial cable it seems that the coaxial cable is to blame. With the cable unconnected the flickering disappears, but once it is reconnected the flickering reappears.
OK, so it's the cable, but why does the component video not like the coaxial cable?
I know the cable signal is weak as it is split with a crummy RCA 4-way splitter and the legnth of the cable is quite long; fifty feet, I believe. So, would a better quality coaxial cable make a difference?
To be specific, a coaxial cable is basically any cable that has concentric conductors (i.e. your typical 75 ohm RCA/phono cable). However, composite video and component video cables are of these type.
Oh, RG-6 or RG-59. It has an F-type connector.Originally posted by: brigden
Originally posted by: Howard
Err, which coaxial cable are you talking about?Originally posted by: brigden
I think I may have isolated the issue. It isn't the DVD player, as first suspected, but after farting about with the surge protector, wall outlet, and coaxial cable it seems that the coaxial cable is to blame. With the cable unconnected the flickering disappears, but once it is reconnected the flickering reappears.
OK, so it's the cable, but why does the component video not like the coaxial cable?
I know the cable signal is weak as it is split with a crummy RCA 4-way splitter and the legnth of the cable is quite long; fifty feet, I believe. So, would a better quality coaxial cable make a difference?
To be specific, a coaxial cable is basically any cable that has concentric conductors (i.e. your typical 75 ohm RCA/phono cable). However, composite video and component video cables are of these type.
Sorry, I mean the kind I receive the cable TV through.