Audio/video cable guide

Setting up a home theater? Our look at audio/video cables will help you identify every important connection available.

S-Video (aka Y/C)

193829-belkin_svideo_606_original

Use it for: Midrange video devices

If you have a choice, select it instead of: RCA composite, coaxial

It's similar in performance and use to: Composite video

It adapts to: Composite video (but it loses its quality advantages)

Add more ports by: Connecting a splitter, repeater, or receiver

Though this kind of connection is a clear boost over a composite RCA connection, S-Video is still far from the quality of HDTV-supporting cables such as component.

Coaxial Video (aka Cable TV Connection)

193829-coax_original

Use it for: Connecting antennas; wiring a VCR to an analog TV; linking from the wall to the TV for cable broadcasts

It's similar in performance and use to: Composite video

Add more ports by: Connecting a splitter

The lowly coaxial cable supplies both analog audio and video between devices. It's also the cable of choice for TV-tuner antennas. Cable companies use this cable, although they'll typically send a digital signal that a converter box at your TV decodes. Nearly any time you attach a coaxial cable directly to a TV (except for a digital antenna), you should expect merely basic quality.

Toslink (aka Optical Cable or S/PDIF)

193829-belkin_optical_toslink_606_original

Use it for: Connecting DVD players, game systems, cable boxes, and other devices to audio receivers

If you have a choice, select it instead of: Analog RCA audio; all other, common audio options

It's similar in performance and use to: Digital RCA audio over a single cable

It adapts to: Mini-Toslink

Add more ports by: Connecting a splitter or receiver

A digital connection, Toslink sends optical pulses that are decoded into audio. The commonly used S/PDIF signal carries surround details. ("S/PDIF" is sometimes used interchangeably as the cable name, although "Toslink" refers to the actual connector.) Mini-Toslink is occasionally used, especially with Apple computers; such jacks are often inside of the typical 3.5mm stereo mini-jack port.

Mini-Jack (aka TRS, 3.5mm Plug, 1/8-Inch Plug, Headphone Jack)

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Use it for: Nearly every portable audio device, computers, portable speakers, video cameras

If you have a choice, select it instead of: A mono mini-jack

It's similar in performance and use to: 1/4-inch plug, 2.5mm plug

It adapts to: 1/4-inch plug, 2.5mm plug, RCA plugs

Add more ports by: Connecting a splitter

This headphone connector is ubiquitous, available on nearly every audio device and offered as the basic plug on media players. You'll most often encounter a stereo connection, which has two rings around the end. (If the plug has only one ring, it sends mono audio.) The plug is also often used to send video along with audio, adapting from the mini-jack end on a device to RCA plugs. The audio-signal output on a mini-jack is louder than the signal typically carried on stereo RCA plugs, so if you use an adapter (if you plug an iPod into a receiver, for example), turn up the volume slowly.

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PC World Staff

PC World (US online)
Topics: home theatre

Comments

Peter Downey

1

Why O Why is it that you cant get short cables?
In many cases when you have a number of Audio or Audio Vision boxes stacked one on top of the other, all you need is a cable around 250 MM long. But the shortest cables I could buy are in excess of 1 Meter. So you end up with an unnecessary and untidy bundle of cables behind your equipment collecting dust and becoming a bigger mess. Then there are possible problems with losses in the cables and the picking up of unwanted signals.

Further: It could be argued that the use of longer than needed cables is also a wast of the earth's resources.

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