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AV Cables Buying Guide
A comprehensive audio & video cable guide that will give you all the information you need on how to buy audio & video cables.
TV Input Overview
Getting Started
After purchasing your favorite HDTV and its additional components, you are going to need the appropriate video cables to help your set it all up. Video cables connect all the necessary electronics together and present them in an incredible way to complete your entire home entertainment center. When shopping for audio & video cables, make sure you get the best ones for the job. Here' you will find out which audio & video cables you will need to get the most out of your viewing experience.
Types
DVI Cables

DVI stands for Digital Video Interface. While all of the above cables carry an analog signal, DVI is the first video cable to carry both an analog signal and a digital signal. Keeping a signal digital from the source (digital converter boxes, HD cable and satellite boxes, Blu-ray players, etc.) to the display provides the overall best possible image. DVI is not used very often at this point but does appear on some projectors and computer products.
HDMI Cables

For all current and future products, this will be the connection of choice. HDMI offers a whole new world of quality and simplicity. Instead of using multiple cables to carry the audio and video signals from component to component, HDMI carries video, audio, and control signals in one cable. It can carry both digital and analog signals and offers the highest picture and sound quality of any type of connection. Visit our HDMI Buying Guide to understand the full breakdown.
Digital Optical Cables

Optical cables transmit digital audio signals as pulses of light. Similar to coaxial, it's surround-sound-capable and can deliver 5.1-channels of audio. Unfortunately, it cannot carry the new high-resolution formats from Blu-ray. The sound quality of optical and coaxial cables is about the same, though optical connections are more commonly used.
Speaker Wire

Speaker wire is used to make the electrical connection between loudspeakers and audio amplifiers. They can be purchased in a variety of sounds and are incredibly easy to install. Depending on where you place your speakers, you can run speaker wires into tigh corners or behind walls.
Component Cables

Component video cables divide the video into 3 parts: one part brightness and 2 parts color. The more the video signal is separated, the better the end result. When it comes to the different cables that can carry high definition video and high quality audio signals to a digital or HD TV, component cables are the most basic.
Things to Keep in Mind...
Cable length is also important. Try to use 6-foot cables at the shortest. Initial hookup is much easier, as is cleaning and maintenance. It is easy to bundle up some extra cable, but it is almost impossible to make a cable longer. Always err on the longer side if possible.
Always use the best possible type of cable when connecting your equipment. In other words, if your products support HDMI, you should use HDMI and not a lesser type of connection. The cable types ranked in order of quality of signal from best to worst is: HDMI, DVI, component video, S-video, composite video, coaxial. For audio products it is: HDMI, optical or digital coax, composite.
Features
The key to finding the best cables for your system is to be appropriate. If you bought the best possible TV you could buy, it only makes sense to use the best possible cables. If you bought a more value priced TV, mid-grade cables would be more appropriate. Unfortunately, the cables supplied with products are rarely the best choice.
Cables consist of 3 main parts. The conductor is the actual wire that passes the signal from one component to another. Shielding insulates the conductor. The connector is what attaches the cable to your equipment.
These are the 3 key things that make one cable better than another. As you increase the quality of a cable, the first and most important thing that improves is the conductor. Basically, as cables get better, they use higher quality metal and more of it. A good analogy is building a highway. If the cars are the AV signals, the cables are the highways they travel. If the highway is made of dirt (low-grade copper or other metals) and only one lane wide (those really skinny zip cord type of cables supplied with many products), the cars aren't going to be able to travel that highway very well. If the highway is made of state of the art materials (solid core copper, stranded silver, solid silver, etc.) and are many lanes wide (many cables can end up as much as ¾" in diameter and are a very heavy gauge), the cars are going to get from point A to point B very effectively.
Better shielding prevents other stuff from getting on that highway with the cars. It would be bad to have wildlife, children, non-yielding cross traffic, and other impediments on a busy highway. By the same token, it is bad to allow interference into your cables. Things like wireless networks, power cords, phone lines, TV signals, radio signals, cell phones, baby monitors, and many other wireless signals permeate your home and do significant damage to AV signals if traveling down an unshielded or poorly shielded cable. The better shielded a cable is, the cleaner and less "dirty" that signal is when it gets to your components.
Connectors are also important. Going back to the highway analogy, a great highway does no one any good if the on and off ramps are not equally as good. How a signal gets into and out of a cable is the function of the connector. Snapped, molded, or pressed on connectors don't allow the signal to flow into the cable properly. As cable quality increases, so does connector quality. Things like using better metal, welding the connectors on, and improving the fit of a connector to its component are things that improve overall signal and cable quality.
Cable length is also important. Try to use 6-foot cables at the shortest. Initial hookup is much easier, as is cleaning and maintenance. It is easy to bundle up some extra cable, but it is almost impossible to make a cable longer. Always err on the longer side if possible.
Always use the best possible type of cable when connecting your equipment. In other words, if your products support HDMI, you should use HDMI and not a lesser type of connection. The cable types ranked in order of quality of signal from best to worst is: HDMI, DVI, component video, S-video, composite video, coaxial. For audio products it is: HDMI, optical or digital coax, composite.