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Snapperjw

macrumors 6502
Original poster
Oct 8, 2007
341
295
So firstly I know similar questions have been posted before but I'm confused!!

I have apple tv on order ( arriving Monday 3rd March ) but I don't have a HD Ready TV!! Just a Sony CRT Widescreen with 2 scart sockets on the back...

I thought I would buy a cable with the 3 component leads on one end and a scart on the other... Hey presto I'm in business with apple TV...

From what I read that is not going to work????

Is my only choice really to by a converter for about £90? Surely not!!!

Finally is this because in the U.S older TV's are component video and in Europe they are Scart?

Thanks, Snapper
 
Actually older TVs in the US have Composite (One video Cable, one or two audio), newer TVs have Component, the newest have HDMI and sometimes VGA or DVI.

When looking at converters, it all depends on what your TVs SCART ports support. I've seen some interesting Component to SCART converters, and some HDMI to SCART converters.

TEG
 
So firstly I know similar questions have been posted before but I'm confused!!

I have apple tv on order ( arriving Monday 3rd March ) but I don't have a HD Ready TV!! Just a Sony CRT Widescreen with 2 scart sockets on the back...

I thought I would buy a cable with the 3 component leads on one end and a scart on the other... Hey presto I'm in business with apple TV...

From what I read that is not going to work????

Is my only choice really to by a converter for about £90? Surely not!!!

Finally is this because in the U.S older TV's are component video and in Europe they are Scart?

Thanks, Snapper


please let us know if it works, I'm in the same boat tv wise (nice sony crt) and would get an apple tv if it would connect ok.
 
even some older crts, from may be 5 years back have one component connection. i had a 5 year old sony wega crt and it had a single component connection. it only supported 480i but it was something nontheless
 
You can get a SCART to component cable easily and cheaply, but your TV might only accept RGB component, and not YCbCr component (which the Apple TV outputs).

I think this is the case with my TV, and probably most older TVs in Europe. This is one reason why I haven't bought an Apple TV (yet).
 
Funny thing is there seems to be lots of SCART to component converters (and it's not just an adaptor cable, but a circuit), but there don't seem to be many component :)apple:TV's output) to SCART (TV's input) converters, which is what the OP needs. It suggests that the demand is for devices to support people connecting their older sources to newer TVs, rather than the other way around.

Here's a good article.
 
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