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Component Audio Video Cables Designed For Safety |
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Tuesday, 14 August 2007 |
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With any new or modern game system, Digital Video Disk (DVD) player, Compact Disk (CD) player, or Stereo comes a set of cables. The cables are have a connector at the end that are either red, yellow, or white. These color-coded component audio video cables match up with your television (video), or stereo (audio). These are your component audio video cables. These cables transmit images and sound through pulsating electricity. My how things change. Not long ago, in order to play a video game, all that was required was a converter box.
The converter box had a switch or a slide marked with ‘TV’ and ‘Game’. This was connected to the back of your television by two thin bare ‘horseshoe’ connectors to two screws in the back. In order to play your game, you had to set the channel on either 3 or 4, and switch the setting to ‘Game’ and then back to ‘TV’ when you were through playing. The major disadvantage to this previous version was the possibility of getting shocked while attaching the game system. Considering that there was electric current from the TV combined with the current from the game system; it became a potential hazard. So, not only has the invention of component audio video cables made life easier, it’s made it potentially safer. With advances in technology, now you simply connect your component audio video cables to the game itself and then into the corresponding connector on your TV. No more sliding a switch back and forth, just change the ‘channel’. This advancement has created a virtual ‘Plug ‘n Play’ situation. All of this due to the advent of component audio video cables. To go through and explain amperage and voltage would require an enormous amount of study; an expedition best left to the pro’s. Suffice to say that your component audio video cables are more technologically advanced than their predecessors. The basis of this advancement being the transmission of it’s signal or ‘data’ through pulsating electricity. |