<FONT face="verdana, arial, helvetica" size=2>I'll try to make sense of this.
I had a digital cable box from Comcast. I took it down today to trade it out for one with an s-video connection.
I get home today to hook it up and the picture is pretty fuzzy.
The main cable from the wall is going into the input of the cable box and then the output of the box goes to the TV. I also have the s-video out of the cable box connected to the s-vid IN of my Onkyo 575x. Then I have the s-video out of the Onkyo going to the tv.
SO my question is why would I need the coaxial cable connected if I have an s-video conneciton?
Disconnecting the s-video on the cable box does nothing (I thought that may be why my picture is fuzzy).
What could I be missing here?
thanks for any help.</FONT>
I had a digital cable box from Comcast. I took it down today to trade it out for one with an s-video connection.
I get home today to hook it up and the picture is pretty fuzzy.
The main cable from the wall is going into the input of the cable box and then the output of the box goes to the TV. I also have the s-video out of the cable box connected to the s-vid IN of my Onkyo 575x. Then I have the s-video out of the Onkyo going to the tv.
SO my question is why would I need the coaxial cable connected if I have an s-video conneciton?
Disconnecting the s-video on the cable box does nothing (I thought that may be why my picture is fuzzy).
What could I be missing here?
thanks for any help.</FONT>