B
Black Swan
how many do I get/need to link up; playstation, dvd, vcr, bt vision box...tia guys.
how many do I get/need to link up; playstation, dvd, vcr, bt vision box...tia guys.
They're a complete con... in fact this applies to almost all "premium" cabling
You haven't got time to watch telly, there's loads of work for you to do on 'ere!
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Really? So all those before and after demos in comet/currys etc. are fookin bogus? Cheeky tw@ts, good job I don't shop with them, found a place that slaughters their prices by 25%...
how many do I get/need to link up; playstation, dvd, vcr, bt vision box...tia guys.
I paid £30 for the HDMI lead from currys when i bought the telly, £4 on ebay - frikken con as with all leads from these places, they know you are in a feeding frenzy whilst buying the telly.
Very unlikely that expensive cables will make any difference at all. HDMI is digital => small amounts of noise in the signal are irrelevant. A bit is either 0 or 1. If a cable is not performing properly, the symptoms would be incorrect pixels on the screen probably in clusters and should be very obvious. I've tried three HDMI cables including gold plated connectors and also DVI / HDMI converters and the picture on a 40" LCD Samsung looks just the same. If you are running very long lengths of HDMI cables there may be a case for looking into more expensive cables.
All this malarky probably stems from the old days of LPs and high quality audio pickups which produce a very low voltage analog signal fed to the audio pre-amp. Even small amounts of corrosion on connectors could adversely affect such a signal, and there is a plausible case for gold plating and high quality cables. Induced 50Hz mains hum was also a factor in mandating good cables. In modern digital systems at much higher voltages, it seems mostly a case of marketing nonsense.