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-   -   $40 for a 6 foot HDMI cable? (https://www.dieselbombers.com/bomb-shelter/21175-40-6-foot-hdmi-cable.html)

Begle1 01-19-2009 01:28 PM

$40 for a 6 foot HDMI cable?
 
How the hell does a 6 foot cable cost $40?

$160 to connect my new surround sound reciever to my cable box, television and DVD player? :ph:

I guess my speakers will have to make due with $3 RCA cables...

H1 Bomber 01-19-2009 01:37 PM

6 Foot (2 Meter) HDMI Male to Male Cable, 28AWG : Today's Price: $3.95 6 Foot (2 Meter) HDMI Male to Male Cable, 28AWG

Not sure where you are buying your cables at, but I wouldn't pay $40 for a cable that cost about $4 to make.

Johnny Cetane 01-19-2009 03:12 PM

I don't know a ton about them but the price seems pretty common. You can pay up to $110 for a Monster brand one of the same length. From the reading I've done it's really important to have a quality cable with the 120 htz LCD TVs more than others. You want to make sure that your cable is rated at 120 htz and has good quality terminals. If it's not then you might not be getting the full quality.

I found this out the hard way. I kept seeing little trails behind players while they were running down the football field. It was happening with some high def movies too. I did some reading and bought a better cable. Fixed the issue right then and there. I paid about $60 for mine.

TCU Fan 01-19-2009 03:20 PM

The high quality cables are very nice to have, especially if you are viewing 1080p. You may not see much difference on the lower ends. With more and more stuff being broadcast in true 1080p these cables will be more important.

My daughter has a set of the lower quality in her room and I can tell a distinct difference between her room and the ones in the other rooms in our house. Bite the bullet and buy a good set, your eyes will thank you.

It is kind of like buying a HD tv and not getting the HD service from your dish provider.

Diesel Dawgs Performance 01-19-2009 03:43 PM

Stay away from the Cheap Cables!!!

Begle1 01-19-2009 03:53 PM

So how much better is HDMI than component video?

My TV is 1080p, I don't know the refresh rate on it... My cable box is 1080i.

Am I loosing any video quality by using component video for DVD's and cable?

Johnny Cetane 01-19-2009 03:57 PM

Yeah. If your box is only putting out 1080i then it may not be worth it for you to get a better cable unless you have Blu-ray, a PS3, etc.

I don't know who you have but some cable boxes can be changed. With the cable box off-TV on, hold down the menu button. If you can change set ups you'll see a new screen pop up with all kinds of things you can tweak. It may be 1080p capable but just not set.

TCU Fan 01-19-2009 04:11 PM

The HDMI is night and day better then the component video from what I have seen with my eyes in my house. Not by the game these stores play with brightness and contrast to sell the items they are pushing that month.

Digital "cable" is going to be hard to get a TRUE 1080p signal, you may not really even get a true 1080I out of cable. Verizion Fios and AT&T Uverse among the satellite is the easiest way to achieve 1080P as they are broadcasting true HD signals. Cable signal although plenty good for most is still very distorted. Again looking at my neighbors signal verse my signal on the identical equipment, not what some sales rep told or shown me.

For DVD if you do not have the HDMI set up I am all about the S Video set up, I do not watch much on regular DVD players. We use Blue Ray through the house with HDMI. I am not real big in to DVD though so I cannot help much there.

jstange2 01-19-2009 05:49 PM

I think it also depends on the screen size doesn't it? Same number of pixels on a smaller tv look better than on a bigger tv with the same specs. I have heard that smaller than 40 or 42 you don't hardly notice going from 720p to 1080p. I could be wrong.

TCU Fan 01-19-2009 06:10 PM

It really depends on the brand of TV and when you bought it. The technology changes so much that a TV you bought a year or so ago may very well not look as good as a smaller TV you bought today. But the nicer sets have enough difference that you can see the difference between 720 and 1080. It is as big of a difference as digital and analog years ago. IMO.

2001shrtbedcummins 01-19-2009 07:23 PM

Okay, so if you're running standard definition, component is the most you want to spend on it. High definition through any of the big tv service providers is usually 720p or 1080i. Nowhere near 1080p. DishNetwork has the DishonDemand programming available in 1080p.

For any high def I would bite the bullet and buy good quality hdmi's. Go to Best Buy and get rocket fish brand. It's made by monster and usually a good bit less. Don't buy the off brand cables, they deteriorate over time and look like garbage. The better cables don't. So do it right the first time.

Begle1 01-19-2009 07:34 PM

So figure this question out.


If I go with component video between the cable box and television, I get black bars on either side of the screen.

If I go with S-video or compound video between the cable box and television, the picture takes up the entire screen (with no deformity).

What gives?

TCU Fan 01-19-2009 08:41 PM

You should get the black bars on some HD broadcast. If you look at Sportscenter, they have the black lines (or shadowing) on each side. If you are watching a football game on ESPN there are no black lines. It all has to do with how they are broadcasting it. You can remove the black lines by stretching your screen but it really distorts the picture quality.

2001shrtbedcummins 01-19-2009 09:40 PM

Okay here's a question, do you have a high definition wide screen TV? If so, do you have high def broadcast? Like Aaron said, high definition is the full screen on a high def tv. Standard definition will give you the square screen. With the S video and component not sure.

Hut 01-25-2009 01:35 AM

I just paid $49 each for 2 12 ft. HDMI cables 1080p rated. I then go to costco and happen to see a nice bundled set of 2 12 ft. HDMI cables and screen cleaner for $49... :argh:

wildbill 01-25-2009 07:05 AM

I paid $100 for a 3' HDMI cable. (Monster Cable)


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