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The fan surround is often made with a semi rigid card material called 'Fish Paper', and in time it can get distorted. Sometimes you can just bend it, or just trim it away a bit.
Yes, and no. You can connect the HDMI cable from the DVD player to your television for audio and video, but you will not get true surround sound as designed by dolby or dts.
If you have surround speakers with a surround system, then connect the Player to the surround system using for example RCA cables (White and Red).
If you have speakers only, connecting many speakers to a non-surround system won't give you surround. In surround systems the sound is controlled, elaborated and distributed through the speakers by a circuit.
Make sure you have patch cables hooked up from the audio out of the dvd player to audio IN of the Television, using the same named input (Video 1, 2, Fnt, Bck, Aux) that you used for the video in.
Make Sure the correct sound filed is being used refer to owners manual and the program is true surround also the surround speakers will only give background noise not a full channel
the most likely cause would be either the color wheel or the cooling fan. If you listen at the rear cover can you dtermine where the noise is loudest? does the noise instantly go away when you turn the power off after its been on awhile? If so its the color wheel, If not its the cooling fan.
That's only in television signal thats catch a radio frequency signal but can't occur when playing DVD,maybe near to your place there someone using a radio com...
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