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Make sure that you are using a headphone to A/V (red and white RCA) (1-to-2) adapter. Then select source on your home theater until it says AUX or wherever you have the A/V (red and white RCA) cable plugged into. If you give me themanufacturer and model number of your home theater system, I can tell you EXACTLY what to do.
Some HTS's come with docking stations - they are probably not designed for Sansa players.
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Installation steps: These steps work for Wii, Nintendo GameCube, Nintendo 64, and Super NES hookups.
Gently pull the yellow cable of the Stereo AV cable apart from the two Audio cables (red & white). Plug the yellow cable into the Video Input on the TV or VCR. Locate an open set of Audio inputs (left & right) on your home stereo. Do NOT use inputs marked "Phono." Plug the white cable into the Audio Left input on your home stereo. Plug the red cable into the Audio Right input on your home stereo. Set the input select on the stereo system to match the label on the set of audio inputs. (For example, if you plugged the Audio cables into the AUX port, switch the stereo to AUX or "auxilliary." Make sure the game is placed properly in the system. Plug the controller(s) into the front of the Control Deck using the left most port for player one. Plug the AC Adapter into the back of the system. Plug the other end into a wall outlet. Turn the power on. Turn on the TV or VCR and locate the input select. It's often called Input Select, AUX (auxilary), Line, Line In, Input, Source, Select, In, or EXT (external. Switch the input select to show the Nintendo game. Note: If you are using a VCR, you will need to set the VCR's TV/VCR button to VCR. You can do this by putting a movie in the VCR, pressing play, then pressing stop.
The game image should now be displayed on the screen. You're ready to play.
Yes this can be done. You have several options for audio hookup. Stereo 2-channel (white and red) RCA cables, digital audio (optical or coaxial) or HDMI. Your home theater must have the inputs available such as optical, coaxial etc. Typically the stereo 2-channel RCA is the simple way. Just connect from the Bluray audio outputs to the Home theater inputs (white and red) for stereo sound. Select the input on the home theater. For Dolby Digital 5.1 use optical digital audio cable (black port) or coaxial (orange RCA port) from Bluray to similar home theater input.
Installation steps: These steps work for Wii, Nintendo GameCube, Nintendo 64, and Super NES hookups.
Gently pull the yellow cable of the Stereo AV cable apart from the two Audio cables (red & white). Plug the yellow cable into the Video Input on the TV or VCR. Locate an open set of Audio inputs (left & right) on your home stereo. Do NOT use inputs marked "Phono." Plug the white cable into the Audio Left input on your home stereo. Plug the red cable into the Audio Right input on your home stereo. Set the input select on the stereo system to match the label on the set of audio inputs. (For example, if you plugged the Audio cables into the AUX port, switch the stereo to AUX or "auxilliary." Make sure the game is placed properly in the system. Plug the controller(s) into the front of the Control Deck using the left most port for player one. Plug the AC Adapter into the back of the system. Plug the other end into a wall outlet. Turn the power on. Turn on the TV or VCR and locate the input select. It's often called Input Select, AUX (auxilary), Line, Line In, Input, Source, Select, In, or EXT (external. Switch the input select to show the Nintendo game. Note: If you are using a VCR, you will need to set the VCR's TV/VCR button to VCR. You can do this by putting a movie in the VCR, pressing play, then pressing stop.
The game image should now be displayed on the screen. You're ready to play.
For the best serious audio I would recommend drawing the audio-only digital feed from the Cable Box via its highest quality audio output. Then turn the TV's volume down. Also run the vanilla RCA stereo audio pair from the cable box to the TV in case you just want to check the weather.
Make certain it is the correct media for the drive. If it is CDR or CDRW media, make sure it is rated for the write speed of the drive. High Speed media for a High Speed drive is labeled with the High Speed logo. If you are testing with an audio CD, play it in your home stereo first to make sure the disc works.
Check also the disc if it has scratches that's why it skips when played. Try a known good CD.
you cannot output sound from your xbox to another dvd system , you can however send the sound to your tv and output the signal to a stereo or home theater system if your looking to have surround sound or looking for stereo sound , the tv should be set to video1-2-3 and thats where youll be able to have sound and picture , , thanks sincerely glenn
Here's one solution, if you have an audio output from your tv, you can go from the audio output on your tv to the audio input on your receiver that way anything that is playing on your tv for example, playstation 3, dvd player etc. Anything playing on your tv will have audio on your onkyo home theater system. The other thing I would try if you want to hook ps3 directly to receiver is go to your connection settings on your ps3 menu and change your connection method to digital optical cable.
try to check the auidio setting on the dvd itself. make sure it is set to 6.1. I think it is set for 2.1..change the setting and you will be just fine. good luck
I have a SONY home theater system, HT-C800DP, there is a crackling sound when playing DVDs - it is almost as if the unit overheats. Is there any solution to this? Sometimes I cannot even finish a DVD as the noise gets very loud.
Thanks,
Cindy
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