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Since you didn’t provide any details about how you connected your set-up, it’s a little difficult to diagnose your problem.
Yup. It’s called a line splitter or plainly a splitter. Go to your hardware store and tell them that you will be using this to connect both your cable line and phone line. Its a small box like object. I’m not certain if there are different kinds but the one I’m using is colored white. I don’t know the price in your country but if converted in US dollars the cost of ours is less than a dollar. You also have to buy a cable with jacks at both ends. You can ask the hardware to put them in place for you so you just need to measure the distance between your main line to your bedroom.
The easy way, as Buford suggested, is get a DVR included with your cable service. The next easy way is to have your cable set up as if there were two TVs, which means a second cable box. Really, that’s all a VCR is, a TV receiver without a picture tube or audio amp.With two cable boxes, one goes to your TV, to watch whatever your want. The other box goes to your VCR, to record whatever you want. And then, your VCR goes to your other input on your TV, and you switch the TV to watch cable or the VCR. (If, for whatever reason, your TV only has one input, then you’ll need to use an A/B switch to select your VCR or your TV’s cable box.After that, there are no easy ways.
It’s a standard USB lead, take your camera (as there are a couple of variations) into any computer store they will have one.Chris
Contact JBL.
You are missing a lot of steps.Your TV has a tuner that lets you pick out 1 channel out of 10-20 that the antenna can see.And … you only have 5-10 channels total. Cable and Sat companies carry hundreds of stations (ESPN, HBO, Showtime, Food Network, CNN, etc.) that are never broadcast over the air so you can never get these channels with just an antenna.There are box’s you can buy like the DishNetwork HDTVPal that takes antenna feed in, will record/pause/rewind, but give you HDMI output if this is what you are looking for. Runs about $300 with no subscription/monthly costs.They also make HDTV tuners for about $150 you can buy at BestBuy that take antenna signals in and offer HDMI out.Does this answer your question?
Yes, HDMI cable carry audio and video. That cable is all you need.
No it sounds as if the aerial socket is brokenIf your TV has a scart socket you could connect a digital freeview reciever.If you have a video or dvd recorder connected by scart you could turn the TV to AV and view using the tuner in the video or dvd recorder.
All TVs have a coax input. Yours may be labeled ANT In or something, but it’s there. Just get a standard RG-6 type coax cable and connect the TV as normal. You’ll use the TV’s ANT input, not one of the auxiliary or video inputs.As for your laptop, you’ll need to get a USB TV tuner, install that on laptop, and connect the coax cable to the tuner. They’re about $30-40 at most computer stores. Best Buy should have them.You can use a coax splitter if you want your TV and laptop connected at the same time.