It's a 5.1 home theater system by Infinity 4 speakers, and channel speaker includedis a 100 watt sub-woofer. The receiver is by JVC 100 watts per channel with an equalizer. My pc is gateway 420gr with Pentium 4 processor 515, 160 gb, 512 mb dor. I don't have a clue how to hook this up and I truly need some detailed help with step by step instructions. Or if anyone knows of any videos on net that will show me?
Your skills are appreciated. Thanks
theKingschild2
ONLY the DVD-player (not the speakers)....By the way, how well can I trust the people at the repair shop?
My JBL home theater system with an Onkyo 607. Playing really loud. You can't hear how good and loud it sounds, but you can see the system and imagine it =) You can see the light on top of the subwoofer flashes because of the high excursion. The JBL e 100 front speakers isn't playing an excursion. The reciver isn't strong enough for them to do that. But it was a huge difference from the old one and this =)
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Not just the receiver nut the speakers as well. I want it to include a blu-ray dvd player as well. I will be using it in a pretty small living room and I want to be be able to hook up my Xbox and HD TV (when not playing DVDs).
Any suggestions?
Want to buy a blue ray player and hook it up to a all in one dvd home theater system. Will get the blue ray video with surround sound by doing this? Or can I take the dvd player off and hook the speakers into the blue ray?
On my home theater system, my receiver is set to "auto". I have a 5.1 system. My receiver always displays "digital" even when watching a non-digital broadcast. I can manually switch in to analog, and then it will say "analog", but the sound is much quieter. Is this normal operation?
I have a Marantz SR5600 receiver, connected to a Cablevision Hi-Def cable box. The little box on the receiver display correctly indicates which speakers are being used (either 2, 3, or 5 lights appear, each representing 1 speaker). I have an optical cable connected from the cable box to the receiver. For non-digital TV broadcasts, 2 or 3 lights appear, but it still says "digital". Is this normal? Thank you for your help. PS: I'm not sure what "digital-digital" means.
On my home theater system, my receiver is set to "auto". I have a 5.1 system. My receiver always displays "digital" even when watching a non-digital broadcast. I can manually switch in to analog, and then it will say "analog", but the sound is much quieter. Is this normal operation?
I have a Marantz SR5600 receiver, connected to a Cablevision Hi-Def cable box. The little box on the receiver display correctly indicates which speakers are being used (either 2, 3, or 5 lights appear, each representing 1 speaker). I have an optical cable connected from the cable box to the receiver. For non-digital TV broadcasts, 2 or 3 lights appear, but it still says "digital". Is this normal? Thank you for your help. PS: I'm not sure what "digital-digital" means.
I'm looking for a basic and cheaper home theater system that would do surround sound for DVD player, BlueRay player, Xbox, PS3 and my laptop. Any suggestions? Will these normal DVD home theater systems do that?
@The One: Thanks for the answer. So, I should buy a receiver with speakers and not a dvd home theater. But what about TV? Will TV (from normal antennas etc) connect to that receiver for surround sound?
Learn about the subwoofer and the difference between active and passive when setting up your Dolby 5.1 surround sound home entertainment system with expert installation tips in this free online home stereo video clip. Expert: Tony Ramirez Bio: Tony Ramirez produces cutting-edge websites, graphics, and videos. He has over 11 years experience in multimedia production, including movies, commercials, and other venues. Filmmaker: Adolph Ramirez