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Originally Posted by ConciergeMike
(Post 12329392)
I wore an ankle-length leather trenchcoat to the Jets-Broncos game last year. It was soaked thru by the end of the game, so I tossed it in the trunk and drove home. I opened my trunk a few days later to find mold-encrusted leather.
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Originally Posted by ConciergeMike
(Post 12329335)
ETA: No comprende "HDMI for video only". I thought HDMI's meaning in life was to carry audio and video together.
Originally Posted by ConciergeMike
(Post 12329347)
Surround speakers at all times is what my mother wants achieved, yes. I disagree, but my vote means nothing.
The TV is a 52" Mitsubishi DLP, WD-52631. I would connect it as such: cable box video out: component to the TV* cable box audio out: RCA jacks to the TV in on the receiver receiver video out: component to the TV receiver audio: proprietary cable to the subwoofer, etc. *I believe that comcast HD goes up to 1080i so you're not gaining anything by using HDMI. If the only cable you have is HDMI, use that but you'll need to mute the audio on the HDMI via the cable box. |
Originally Posted by icurhere2
(Post 12329395)
I've been telling people of a May deadline since February. If I knew the content of their program, I could write the proposal in a day. Sadly I am not kidding.
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Originally Posted by ConciergeMike
(Post 12329380)
The HDMI is running only between the box and the TV. Why would I want to make the video out the component cable when HDMI is more gooder?
Originally Posted by sbm12
(Post 12329383)
That may be what its purpose in life is but the system you have doesn't want to work that way. I'm basically suggesting that you use the HDMI for video to the TV and the RCA from the cable box direct to the surround sound system. I don't know if the cable box will output on both systems at the same time - I've had some that wouldn't - but going through the TV to get to the surround sound system seems like an extra step that isn't necessary. Unless your audio is doing a mileage run, of course. ;)
Something else occurred to me, though: it may be a bad HDMI cable. In any event, the test that I outlined where the component video to the tv and analog audio directly to the receiver should give some indication as to where the issue is. Or at least what to do next. |
Originally Posted by Steph3n
(Post 12329393)
yoooooooooouuuu again!
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Originally Posted by icurhere2
(Post 12329385)
On (wholly-owned affliliate of SkyTeam partner)? :p
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Originally Posted by jrzyshawn
(Post 12329391)
Deleted.
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Originally Posted by jrzyshawn
(Post 12329408)
:D:P:rolleyes::eek::D
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Originally Posted by rolov
(Post 12329415)
:rolleyes:
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Originally Posted by Steph3n
(Post 12329402)
I have a pretty hard deadline on an issue Feb 2010.
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Originally Posted by Mackieman
(Post 12329418)
Remember, there are no additional benefits for earnings over 75,000. :D
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Originally Posted by Mackieman
(Post 12329405)
For the specific reason of determining what is causing the audio issue. Once that issue is diagnosed, a course of action to remedy it can be offered. :)
Agreed, but most cable boxes do not like having component/s-video/anything else and HDTV via HDMI running at the same time, something about DRM/copyright junk in the video stream. Something else occurred to me, though: it may be a bad HDMI cable. In any event, the test that I outlined where the component video to the tv and analog audio directly to the receiver should give some indication as to where the issue is. Or at least what to do next. |
Originally Posted by icurhere2
(Post 12329428)
In icurhere2 true-quasi-Type-A world, this would have an implementation timeline that ends October 2009. In icurhere2 current-herding-cats world, the planning committee would have an initial meeting in June 2010.
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I gave up 85K to help Copa Air with their AVOD problem. :rolleyes::-::D
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