Here's an article on how to connect your computer to your TV using VGA and audio: http://gainedknowledge.blogspot.com/2008/09/connect-your-computer-to-your-tv-...
How To Connect a Computer To Your TV (Page 3 of 4)
Categories: Televisions and Projectors Computers, Laptops, and Media Servers PC Gaming
Connecting with VGA/DVI
You can make a connection with DVI by following the same basic steps below. Substitute a DVI cable in place of the 15-pin VGA cable. If you are attempting to connect your computer's VGA output to an S-video connection, refer to Page 2 - Connecting with S-Video.
To make a connection with a 15-pin VGA cable, you will need the following:
A 15-pin VGA output on your computer (All PC's should have this)
- A 15-pin VGA input on your television
- A 15-pin VGA cable
- A 1/8" to Left/Right RCA cable
- A computer monitor (for setup, if needed)
Some (though rare) televisions may include a 5 wire RGB input (R, G, B, H, V) or 3 wire RGB (RGB with syncs on green). Do not mistake a 3 wire RGB input for component video. You can use this input to make a connection. However, you will need to obtain a 15-pin VGA to 5 or 3-wire RGB cable.
If you've identified a 15-pin VGA input on your television, you will need to do a little hunting in your television's display manual for compatible display and signal formats. 15-pin inputs on a TV could support RGB, component video, or both. In order to use it with a PC VGA output, it must be RGB compatible.
Compatible resolutions could be listed as resolutions or as letters; a chart is below to explain them. If your input is PC compatible, it will say one or more of the following:
- VGA = 640x480
- SVGA = 800x600
- XGA = 1024x768
- SXGA = 1280x1024
- UXGA = 1600x1200
- WVGA= 858x480
- WSVGA = 1280x768 or 1280x800
- WUXGA = 1920x1080 or 1920x1200
Your 15-pin input might not be directly PC compatible. If this is the case it will say one or a few of the following television formats. The compatible PC resolution is listed next to it.
- 480i - not compatible with most PC graphic adapters
- 480p - 720x480
- 720p - 1280x720
- 1080i - 1920x1080 (interlaced)
- 1080p - 1920x1080
If your input does not list any computer formats, only television formats, it's okay! We can still get this to work.
If you're hooking up a Plasma, DLP, or LCD television you should be able to plug it in and turn it on. However, if you do this and get no picture, use a separate computer monitor to adjust settings before plugging the cable into the TV.
- Change the TV input to the appropriate selection to engage the 15-pin VGA input.
- Connect the VGA cable from the back of the computer to the computer monitor.
- Turn on the computer. An image should appear on your PC screen.
- Right click on the desktop and select properties. Click on the tab that says settings. If your television is PC compatible, go to step 5. If your TV is not compatible go to step 6.

- If your TV is PC compatible, move the resolution slider to a compatible selection. 1024x768 is a common choice, but today's newer 720p and 1080p flat panels should support their PC signals in their native resolutions. Make your choice and hit apply. Go to step 7. Some TV's (particularly older sets) are only compatible at 640x480 or 800x600. If so, it may not be listed on the slider. Hit advanced, and select the adapter tab. Press "list all modes" and select 640x480, High Color (16 bit), 60 Hertz from the list of valid modes. Click "yes" when it asks you to keep this setting.

- If your TV is not PC compatible, you will need to select a format that is compatible with your TV. Within the settings tab, click on advanced. Go to the adapter tab and select "list all modes." Select 720x480, High Color (16 bit), 60 Hertz from the list. Click "yes" if it asks you to keep this setting. Go to step 7.
- Unplug the cable from the back of the monitor and plug it in to the TV. If you made the proper selections, you should have an image on your TV screen. If your TV was PC compatible, you do not need to take any additional steps. Connect the 1/8" to L/R RCA cable from the audio output on your computer to the corresponding audio jacks on your TV.
- If your TV was not PC compatible, you should have an image on the screen. It's likely that the icons are very big. Using the chart above and the "list all modes" selection, you can try to find different resolutions that are compatible with your TV. When selecting resolution, the screen will blank out. If the image does not return, you found an incompatible display format. Do nothing and it should switch back to the last setting after 15 seconds. TIP: you can make more choices appear under "list all modes" by going to the monitor tab and deselecting the box that says "Hide modes that this monitor can't display."
Once complete, you can remove the computer monitor. You will be able to shut down the computer when not in use, or use the stand by and hibernation modes. The computer will keep your current settings unless you physically change them, or install new drivers for your graphics card.
If you're having trouble finding a compatible resolution using the Windows Display Manager, check for additional software from the graphics chip maker that may offer more control options. From the Display properties settings screen, click advanced, then check the tabs at the top for additonal software from ATI, nVidia, or Intel depending on the graphics chip manufacturer. For example, here's a screenshot of the nVidia Control Panel.

<< Page 2: Connecting With S-Video | Page 4: Connecting With Component Video >>
Wow, I just wanted this information badly. In fact, I have a digital TV here at home and was looking for ways to connect the computer to it. So indepth information, thanks Tech lore.
Lenin Nair
http://cutewriting.blogspot.com
I have a Dell D600 with a 15 pin video out. I have a new Sharp flat screen with a Green,Red and Blue input. I bought a 15pin with the 3, G,R,B, cables. I put the TV's input on the component setting. Nothing but black screen.
Is there a 15pin with the standard yellow video cable?
This should not be this hard.
View unverified member's comment - posted by some guy
wsoxman said: I have a Dell D600 with a 15 pin video out. I have a new Sharp flat screen with a Green,Red and Blue input. I bought a 15pin with the 3, G,R,B, cables. I put the TV's input on the component setting. Nothing but black screen. Is there a 15pin with the standard yellow video cable? This should not be this hard.
There are threads where this adapter is discussed, and for most consumer grade TVs, it simply won't work. The signals are simply different.
Component video inputs on most TVs sport red, green, and blue connectors, but that's not the same as an RGB input. Component video looks for luminance and two chrominance signals: red difference, and blue difference. RGB signals are comprised of 5 different parts: Red drive, Blue drive, Green drive, and horizontal and vertical syncs. RGB outputs are typically 5 wires, sporting a cable for each part.
The adapter you bought is for certain monitors that support RGB over three cables, putting the syncs on the green drive cable. You don't find this connection used on consumer televisions, shy of a few rare models I've seen with RGB inputs over the years. In other words, you need a different device to make that connection to a component video input that converts RGB to component signals. It's talked about in the article on page 4 of the article.
some guy said: What if your computer has a vga port and the tv has a dvi port?
Most DVI ports on digital TVs are DVI-I ports, meaning it supports both digital and analog connections. In most cases, the DVI port will support computer output signals, but you'll need to refer to your TVs owner's manual to be sure.
If it does support PC connections, then you'll need a VGA to DVI adapter, which can be bought online or in some stores. They're not that expensive.
Matt Whitlock said:some guy said: What if your computer has a vga port and the tv has a dvi port?Most DVI ports on digital TVs are DVI-I ports, meaning it supports both digital and analog connections. In most cases, the DVI port will support computer output signals, but you'll need to refer to your TVs owner's manual to be sure. If it does support PC connections, then you'll need a VGA to DVI adapter, which can be bought online or in some stores. They're not that expensive.
I got my laptop finally working right with my HDTV. I just use a S-video. The key here is to go into properties, setup, click on display which should show your tv. Click High Color
Then make SURE you click on the EXTEND my windows monitor. Click Apply.
All you might get it a view of your desktop. KEY Open what you want to view and Slide it to the right until it appears on your TV. I have audio cable going into my TV with just a single in the laptop and Red and White in the TV.
wsoxman said:Matt Whitlock said:I got my laptop finally working right with my HDTV. I just use a S-video. The key here is to go into properties, setup, click on display which should show your tv. Click High Color Then make SURE you click on the EXTEND my windows monitor. Click Apply. All you might get it a view of your desktop. KEY Open what you want to view and Slide it to the right until it appears on your TV. I have audio cable going into my TV with just a single in the laptop and Red and White in the TV.some guy said: What if your computer has a vga port and the tv has a dvi port?Most DVI ports on digital TVs are DVI-I ports, meaning it supports both digital and analog connections. In most cases, the DVI port will support computer output signals, but you'll need to refer to your TVs owner's manual to be sure. If it does support PC connections, then you'll need a VGA to DVI adapter, which can be bought online or in some stores. They're not that expensive.
Using S-Video is certainly a possible solution, but if you have an HDTV, it can be beneficial to make it work with VGA, DVI, Component, or HDMI to take advantage of higher resolutions (better photo and video playback). S-Video is limited to 480i, scaled from whatever the desktop resolution is. If your desktop is set to anything higher than 800x600, text is pretty much illegible.
Still, if S-video is working good for you, then rock on!
i have a pc with a vga output and a 4 pin s-video output on the gigabite graffix
card. i want to see the picture on my pc monitor and on a old tv monitor with rca input. (no audio needed) i have the next cables
- s-video to 1 rca
- s-video to 2 rca
how do i do it?. and what cable?. (maybe computer settings?)
michaelbr said: i have a pc with a vga output and a 4 pin s-video output on the gigabite graffix card. i want to see the picture on my pc monitor and on a old tv monitor with rca input. (no audio needed) i have the next cables - s-video to 1 rca - s-video to 2 rca how do i do it?. and what cable?. (maybe computer settings?)
You'll need the S-video to single RCA male plug (which, just as an FYI, will degrade the image a bit).
Make sure you've gotten the latest drivers for your card installed (you didn't specify if it was an nVidia or ATI based card), then you should find the option to enable the TV out in the config settings for the card. The drivers usually install a control panel with all those configuration settings.
Good luck!
Hi, Thank you so much for your help! I just wanted to clarify one thing with you.
I just bought a new HDTV (LG-26LG30),and want to make sure I don't mess this up.
I'm looking at the specifications for my TV and it lists:
PC Audio Input and
RGP In (D-Sub 15)-PC
My laptop (HP-Pav dv2988 nr) has a VGA port.
If I just get a VGA-VGA cable, will my sound transfer over to my TV? Or do I need to get something else to put in the PC Audio Input port on the TV?
And for the VGA-VGA cable, would this one be ok to use?:
http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=102&cp_id=10201&cs_id=1020...
I would appreciate any help you can give me. Thank you!!
I have a laptop with a VGA output and also an S-Video output, but my new TV has only HDMI Inputs and component video inputs. How can I get this to work??
narzel said: Hi, Thank you so much for your help! I just wanted to clarify one thing with you. I just bought a new HDTV (LG-26LG30),and want to make sure I don't mess this up. I'm looking at the specifications for my TV and it lists: PC Audio Input and RGP In (D-Sub 15)-PC My laptop (HP-Pav dv2988 nr) has a VGA port. If I just get a VGA-VGA cable, will my sound transfer over to my TV? Or do I need to get something else to put in the PC Audio Input port on the TV? And for the VGA-VGA cable, would this one be ok to use?: http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=102&cp_id=10201&cs_id=1020... I would appreciate any help you can give me. Thank you!!
The monoprice cable looks like it will do the job just fine provided the TV and port on your laptop are female (which they should be, so I'd say you're fine there).
VGA cables don't carry audio. As listed in the setup for every type of connection in the article, you'll also need a 1/8" male to 1/8" male stereo plug (if the PC audio input on the TV looks like a headphone jack) or a 1/8" stereo to stereo RCA plug cable (if the PC audio input on the TV is your typical L/R audio jack found on most gear). The cable plugs into your laptop's headphone jack and the PC audio input on the TV.
LimoGuy said: I have a laptop with a VGA output and also an S-Video output, but my new TV has only HDMI Inputs and component video inputs. How can I get this to work??
I'm currently researching options for getting PCs pluged into HDMI jacks, but I haven't found one that really works well yet (unless the laptop sports an HDMI output, but not many do right now).
Hello, Trying to hook up Mitsubishi WS-55805 tv to pc with db15 cable male to male (looks like VGA but has 2 rows instead of 3) Not sure what to do. can't get desktop to show on TV. Thanks before hand. I was thinking maybe the drivers are not installed for db15 pci in the computer but just not sure. Please help
dtslammer said: Hello, Trying to hook up Mitsubishi WS-55805 tv to pc with db15 cable male to male (looks like VGA but has 2 rows instead of 3) Not sure what to do. can't get desktop to show on TV. Thanks before hand. I was thinking maybe the drivers are not installed for db15 pci in the computer but just not sure. Please helpdb15 is a serial control cable, not a video output. If memory serves me right, on the WS-55805 there is a db15 com port near the HD input. This was a control port for their matching (mega expensive) DTV tuner at the time, the Mitsubishi HD 1080.
The good news for you, though, is that TV's HD input is both 5 wire RGB and component video selectable in the menu. If you pick up a VGA to five wire RGB cable, you should be able to adjust the timings in your PC to output a compatible resolution of 480p or 1080i.
Your a "LifeSaver" Matt. Now for a tech-dummy like me can you post a picture directions for timing? As well, I have comcast HD DVR which uses the RGBs. Is there someting else I can do? If you need to see manual you can find it here with free membership
http://tv.manualsonline.com/manuals/mfg/mitsubishi/mitsubishi_diamond_series_...
my tv uses this manual. Thanks before hand
dtslammer said: Your a "LifeSaver" Matt. Now for a tech-dummy like me can you post a picture directions for timing? As well, I have comcast HD DVR which uses the RGBs. Is there someting else I can do? If you need to see manual you can find it here with free membership http://tv.manualsonline.com/manuals/mfg/mitsubishi/mitsubishi_diamond_series_... my tv uses this manual. Thanks before hand
Are you using desktop PC or a notebook?
If a desktop, what's the make and model of your graphics adapter?
Thanks for responding. I have a desktop running Vista-DirectX version 10.0 and a NVidia GeForce 6150 LE
ForceWare version 175.21
Total available graphics memory-319MB
Dedicated video memory-128MB
System video memory-OMB
Shared system memory-191MB
Video BIOS version:5.51.28.50.38
IRQ:16
Bus:FPCI
I hope this is what you want.
dtslammer said: Thanks for responding. I have a desktop running Vista-DirectX version 10.0 and a NVidia GeForce 6150 LE ForceWare version 175.21 Total available graphics memory-319MB Dedicated video memory-128MB System video memory-OMB Shared system memory-191MB Video BIOS version:5.51.28.50.38 IRQ:16 Bus:FPCI I hope this is what you want.
Okay, so the 6100 series is an integrated graphics solution that probably doesn't natively support a component video output. That leaves you with two options, since your TV only has one HD capable input:
1. You'll need to pick up a VGA to component video transcoder and a component video switch
2. You'll need to pick up a new (most likely AGP) graphics card that supports component video output with a bundled cable and a component video switch.
The component video switch will let you plug both your cable box and the PC at the same time, and switch between the two. It must support HD signals.
As for the transcoder vs. graphics card, the graphics card will probably be the cheaper and more reliable solution, given that the hardware and drivers should support HDTV compliant resolutions without a lot of tinkering.
Your only other solution is to grab a new graphics card and run it 480p into one of the other component video inputs on the TV (I believe they support 480p) or get a card that supports S-Video and run it that way.
All will be a lot of effort, but the HD solutions with the switch and new card/transcoder will also be a little pricey too. :(
I have Bose dvd player model#AV3-2-1 ll Media Center, can I hook the pc up to this instead of the tv through the component jacks on the back with the RGB to VGA cable you suggested earlier in the post?
dtslammer said: I have Bose dvd player model#AV3-2-1 ll Media Center, can I hook the pc up to this instead of the tv through the component jacks on the back with the RGB to VGA cable you suggested earlier in the post?
Let me clarify. RGB inputs are not the same as component video. Your TV has a direct RGB input, which is unusual. With this input, you could get a cheap VGA to RGB breakout cable, plug it in, and adjust your graphics card to output something compatible (usually 480p or 720p).
If you're going to plug it in component video, you'll need a transcoder or new graphics card one way or another. You can skip the switch if your BOSE 3-2-1 component input (make sure it's an input) accepts HD signals.
Well I looked and the only inputs are Composite-NTSC of PAL format and s-video. Looks like I'll to get a video card that supports s-video and just plug into one of the inputs on the tv. Now the timing, can you tell me how this is done because I have no idea. I really appreciate your help. Thanks before hand.
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