It looks like you didn’t finish your question, so it’s kind of tough to answer it. Is that a digital to analog box for use in the U.S. with an old analog TV? If so, it’s antenna to the converter input, and the converter output to the TV. The output can either be coaxial cable to the TV antenna jack, or composite cables–yellow video and red+white audio.
You have to carefully follow the setup procedure in the manual that came with the converter, especially the part about scanning for channels. Remember to leave the analog TV permanently on channel 3. You change channels with the converter remote.
Also, in case it isn’t obvious, you need a pretty good antenna connected to the converter. Digital signals need to be stronger than the old analog signals for reliable reception. That means a really good antenna.
March 31st, 2010 at 9:18 am
It looks like you didn’t finish your question, so it’s kind of tough to answer it. Is that a digital to analog box for use in the U.S. with an old analog TV? If so, it’s antenna to the converter input, and the converter output to the TV. The output can either be coaxial cable to the TV antenna jack, or composite cables–yellow video and red+white audio.
You have to carefully follow the setup procedure in the manual that came with the converter, especially the part about scanning for channels. Remember to leave the analog TV permanently on channel 3. You change channels with the converter remote.
Also, in case it isn’t obvious, you need a pretty good antenna connected to the converter. Digital signals need to be stronger than the old analog signals for reliable reception. That means a really good antenna.