I'm almost done installing and setting my new a/v system up, but I have a problem connecting the Wii to the receiver.
The wii component cable is made of five jacks: red, green and blue for the video, another red and a white jack for the audio: but my receiver's Component In has only the Video plugs, and I don't know where to to plug the two audio jacks.
The manual (yes, this time I've read the f***ing manual!) says nothing about it, so I've tried plugging them in a separate Audio In, but with no success: the wii signal is displayed correctly for the video part, no love for the audio instead :(
Has anyone any idea about this problem?
L.
What are all the options for audio plugin on receiver?
There should be an audio input on the back of the receiver with the same name as your video input ("Video 1" or whatever).
Why would you want to run your vid through your receiver anyway? If you don't do that, then any audio selection will work.
Quote from: Pedrito on January 04, 2010, 05:34:46 PM
I'm almost done installing and setting my new a/v system up, but I have a problem connecting the Wii to the receiver.
The wii component cable is made of five jacks: red, green and blue for the video, another red and a white jack for the audio: but my receiver's Component In has only the Video plugs, and I don't know where to to plug the two audio jacks.
The manual (yes, this time I've read the f***ing manual!) says nothing about it, so I've tried plugging them in a separate Audio In, but with no success: the wii signal is displayed correctly for the video part, no love for the audio instead :(
Has anyone any idea about this problem?
L.
There really should be some audio jacks out there...
The component plugs should tell you something like "VCR" or "DVD", just plug the audio in the same place as you did for your video cables. I.e. if where you plugged your component it says "DVD", then use the DVD jacks. Then, when you switch over to your component, it should automatically switch audio&video to the proper channel.
Otherwise, post the make&model # if you AVR, maybe someone is more familiar with this model. It is possible that you may need to enter some setup menu to properly configure the thing.
The back IN ports are:
AV1, component video in with additional Optical In (the Wii is plugged here right now)
AV2, component video in with coaxial
AV3-AV6, irrelevant right now
Audio IN are:
PHONO, for a turntable;
Audio 1 and Audio 2, red+white RCA plugs
One set of Multi Channel Input via RCA (Front, Center, Surround, SubW, etc.)
and 4 HDMI ports that cannot be used for the Wii
grumbler, I'd simply like every signal to pass through the receiver, call it a question of clarity ;)
Viper, the receiver is a Yamaha RX-V765
L.
Audio 1 & AV1 should be together no?
Quote from: Grey Fox on January 04, 2010, 07:12:12 PM
Audio 1 & AV1 should be together no?
That would be my first guess.
Great minds think: alike, but sometimes think: fail.
It was my uneducated guess, too, and the wrong one.
Another question: is the coaxial input under the component's R/G/B a video or an audio input? If an audio, does a connector exist that can convert my two audio RCAs to one single coaxial?
L.
Quote from: Pedrito on January 04, 2010, 06:02:49 PM
grumbler, I'd simply like every signal to pass through the receiver, call it a question of clarity ;)
You realize that you are losing signal (and therefor clarity) by patching through a receiver, right? Every connection you make costs SNR, and the amp adds noting to video SNR.
Unless there is a compelling reason to want to use the switching capability in the receiver, I'd not route video through it at all.
Pedrito, try AV5 or AV6
Video in AV1, Audio in AV5.
Never mind that.
Last page of this : http://www.yamaha.com/yamahavgn/Documents/YEC/AV_Receivers/Manual/RX-V765_manual.pdf
Quote from: grumbler on January 04, 2010, 07:35:48 PM
Quote from: Pedrito on January 04, 2010, 06:02:49 PM
grumbler, I'd simply like every signal to pass through the receiver, call it a question of clarity ;)
You realize that you are losing signal (and therefor clarity) by patching through a receiver, right? Every connection you make costs SNR, and the amp adds noting to video SNR.
Unless there is a compelling reason to want to use the switching capability in the receiver, I'd not route video through it at all.
There are no compelling reasons to pass through the receiver, and maybe I used the wrong term when speaking of "clarity" - the intended use, more than a physical one (I know that every pass through degrades signal quality) is a mental one: I want to control all my equipment through the receiver, and a single cable to go up to the TV.
Plus, I want to try the 1080i upscaling capabilities of the receiver (the Wii's maximum resolution is 576i, IIRC), and to see if the Wii audio section gains benefit from the 5.1 speakers more than from the crappy TV speakers.
GF, the link you gave me needs registration <_<, but I assume it's the manual I have in paper form: I'll read it more carefully ;) ; thanks, though
L.
Get a jacks to SCART converter. I used one of these on my PS2.
Quote from: Pedrito on January 05, 2010, 04:56:36 AM
GF, the link you gave me needs registration <_<, but I assume it's the manual I have in paper form: I'll read it more carefully ;) ; thanks, though
I registered for you! You can register for yourself!
but it says :
Video in AV1
Audio in Audio1
You choose Audio input setting first then you choose video input settings.
My Wii only has 3 jacks for AV.. but like Brazen said, i used the converter and added it to the scart port.
V
No SCART port on the receiver.
GF, I'm too lazy, and you've already researched for me :P
L.
Quote from: Pedrito on January 05, 2010, 04:56:36 AM
Plus, I want to try the 1080i upscaling capabilities of the receiver (the Wii's maximum resolution is 576i, IIRC),
Ah, so there
is a compelling reason to do so. Gotcha. :)
Quote from: Pedrito on January 05, 2010, 07:51:42 AM
No SCART port on the receiver.
GF, I'm too lazy, and you've already researched for me :P
L.
So, when do I found out if I was successful?
Quote from: Grey Fox on January 05, 2010, 08:08:32 AM
So, when do I found out if I was successful?
Not before saturday :P
L.
Quote from: Pedrito on January 05, 2010, 07:51:42 AM
No SCART port on the receiver.
GF, I'm too lazy, and you've already researched for me :P
L.
Looking at the pic of the back I'd say AV 5 or 6, but then my Wii only has three jacks that corresponds nicely with just that :)
V
Quote from: Pedrito on January 05, 2010, 04:56:36 AM
I want to control all my equipment through the receiver, and a single cable to go up to the TV.
Plus, I want to try the 1080i upscaling capabilities of the receiver (the Wii's maximum resolution is 576i, IIRC), and to see if the Wii audio section gains benefit from the 5.1 speakers more than from the crappy TV speakers.
Wii's maximum resolution is 480P which makes a big difference since it's 60 hz and progressive.
The Wii won't gain much from the 5.1 speakers since it only outputs Dolby Pro Logic II (stereo) unlike the PS3 (PCM or DTS HD ) for instance or even the Bobox.
Grey Fox's advice should work.
Get a HD console to link it to the receiver, please ;)
i have a ps3 for blu-ray playback :cool:
L.